Exam 1 - Part 4 Flashcards
What’s the term for loss of tooth structure occlusally and interproximally due to direct tooth to tooth contact?
Attrition
What’s the term for loss of tooth structure from mechanical habit?
Abrasion
What’s the term for loss of tooth structure from chemical process, most often non-bacterial acid dissolution?
Erosion
What is erosion due to exposure to gastric secretions?
Permylosys
What is the term for loss of tooth structure due to repeated tooth flexure caused by occlusal stress?
Abfraction
What is demastication?
Combined effect of attrition and abrasion - chewing tobacco between opposing teeth
What is secondary dentin vs reparative dentin?
- Secondary - physiologic deposition throughout life
- Reparative - localized formation of dentin on pulp-dentin border
What are dentinal tubules devoid of cytoplasmic processes of odontoblasts?
Dead tracts
What are some pulp calcifications called?
- Denticles
- Pulp Stones
- Diffuse linear calcifications
What is the abnormally thickening of cementum?
Hypercementosis
What are some causes of hypercementosis?
- Localized
- Inflammation
- Excessive occlusion
- Fracture/repair
- Loss of antagonist
- Idiopathic
- Generalized
- Paget’s disease of bone
What are calcifications in the PDL called?
Cementicles
How does dental root resorption happen?
- External
- Physiologic
- Pathologic
- Inflammation
- Tumors/cysts
- Reimplanted teeth
- Mechanical force
- Imacted
- Internal
- Injury to pulpal tissue
- Pink tooth of mummery