Endodontic therapy on immature permanent teeth Flashcards

1
Q

Indications for indirect pulp treatment in young permanent teeth

A

vital permanent tooth with deep caries and reversible pulpitis

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2
Q

Objectives of indirect pulp treatment in a young permanent tooth

A

Completely seal carious dentine from oral cavity - inhibit caries progression (reduce number of bacteria)

Preserve vitality

Promote pulp healing

Prevent post op pain sensitivity or swelling

Prevent root resorption or pathology

Root development and apexogensis in immature teeth

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3
Q

Apexification definition

A

inducing root end closure by a calcified barrier in a root with an open apex or the continued apical development of an incompletely formed root in non vital young permanent teeth with a necrotic pulp

Allows the formation of an apical barrier against which a root filling material can be placed

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4
Q

Immature teeth vs mature teeth

A

Immature teeth have a wide open apex, are difficult to obturate, weaker and shorter root with thiner dentine walls

better blood supply = better prognosis

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5
Q

Apexogenesis

A

Continued physiological development and formation of root apex in a vital young permanent tooth

Accomplished by the appropriate vital pulp therapy

(indirect pulp cap, direct pulp cap or partial pulpotomies for carious/traumatic exposures

Preserves vitality of tooth

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6
Q

Which procedures aim to allow apexogenesis to occur?

A

CVEK’s (partial) PULPOTOMY

indirect and direct pulp capping

conventional pulpotomy

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7
Q

Methods of achieving apexification

A

Removing coronal and non vital radicular pulp and cleaning

Intracanal CaOH dressing 2-4 weeks (change 3 monthly) to disinfect canals
-Inducing the formation of a natural barrier at the apex?

Artificial barrier produced with MTA

Pulp revascularisation

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8
Q

Cvek pulpotomy (partial pulpotomy) definition

A

Inflammed pulp tissue beneath an exposure is removed to a depth of around 1-3 mm to reach deeper, healthier tissue

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9
Q

Two indications for partial pulpotomies

A

Carious pulp exposure

Traumatic pulp exposure (Cveks)

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10
Q

Objectives of partial pulpotomy in young permanent teeth (carious/traumatic)

A

Maintain vitality of remaining pulp

Prevent adverse clinical sensitivity, pain or swelling

Prevent signs of internal/external resorption, pulp canal obliteration or apical pathology

Continue normal physiological root development and apexogenesis

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11
Q

Procedure for Cvek’s Pulpotomy (traumatic exposure)

A

LA

Rubber dam

Remove pulpal tissue within 2mm apical to exposure with high speed diamond bur and water

Irrigate with saline/CHX/sodium hypochlorite soaked cotton pellet to stop bleeding

Non-setting CaOH layer to cover pulp/MTA (whiter for ant teeth, CaOH better long term success but MTA more predictable dentin bridge and pulp health)

Seal with setting CaOH and GIC

Restore with composite/RMGIC

Re-evaluate in 6-8 weeks, 3m, 6m , 1 year for root development and vitality

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12
Q

Why is CaOH used in apexification ?

A

bactericidal due to high pH

Initiates a zone of liquefaction and coagulation necrosis adjacent to apical healthy tissues = formation of cementum like calcific barrier

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13
Q

Disadvantages of CaOH for apexification

A

weakening of dentine walls and root fracture risk due to long application of CaOH

long procedure = compliance

costly procedure

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14
Q

When is apexification contrindicated?

A

when the tooth is vital

with very short roots

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15
Q

Apexification procedure

A

Access

Chemomechanical cleaning to 0.5-1 mm short of the apex

Moderate lateral pressure and vertical movements against the dentine wall

Chlorhexidine or 0.5% NaOCl irrigation

Fill with CaOH compressed with cotton pellet to make sure is is in contact with vital apical tissue

repeat 3 monthly for around 18 mths - 2 years

if no barrier forms, place artificial MTA barrier

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16
Q

Use of Mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA)

A

Can be used to create an artificial apical barrier if CaOH fails to do so

Good seal
biocompatible
Radiopaque
Set in moisture
More predictable dentin bridging and pulp health

17
Q

Regenerative endodontic treatment indications

A

tooth with necrotic pulp/non vital and immature apex

No core or post will be required

compliant

patient is not allergic to medicaments or antibiotics required in the procedure

18
Q

First appointment for regenerative endodontics

A

LA , rubber dam and access

irrigate with 1.5% NaOCl and then 17% EDTA

Dry with paper points

non setting CaOH or low conc triple antibiotic paste

seal with IRM or GIC for 1-4 weeks

19
Q

Second appointment for regenrative endodontics

A

LA (no VC) and Rubber dam

irrigate with 17% edta

Dry with paper points

CREATE BLEEDING with over instrumentation - K file at 2 mm past apical foramen to fill canal with blood.

Stop bleeding to allow placement of 3-4mm restorative material

Place resorbable matrix over blood clot is necessary and white MTA/biodentine

3-4mm GIC then composite (permanent coronal restoration)