Indications for Surgery Flashcards
What is the cutoff for A1c at school?
8
Where is the majority of of residual calculus located on the tooth?
At CEJ and line angles
Endpoint of _______:
Eliminate inflammation, bleeding on
probing, suppuration, disease
progression
Final goal of a functional,
comfortable, healthy dentition
with stable probing attachment
levels.
SRP
*: The ‘gold’ standard
Definition: Reconstitution of a lost or missing
part
• In Periodontics
• new periodontal ligament
• new cementum
• new bone
Regeneration*
In perio, what is regeneration?
New cementum
New PDL
New bone
• Osseous contouring with placement
of the flap margin at the alveolar
crest
• Creation of shallow sulci
• Ease of maintenance by therapist
and patient
Pocket Elimination
Is surgical or non surgical therapy more likely to have defects after treatment?
Non surgical is worse
Are single rooted or multirooted teeth more likely to get a better result from surgery?
Single rooted
Reproduction or
reconstitution of a lost or injured part. New
alveolar bone ,cementum, and
periodontal ligament are formed restoring
new architecture and function of the
attachment apparatus. (Example of a bone
replacement grafting procedure.)
Regeneration:
The union of
connective tissue with a root surface
that has been deprived of its original
attachment apparatus. i.e. Reunion of
connective tissue with a root surface which
has been pathologically exposed. (Example
of a connective tissue graft to cover an
area of root recession).
New Attachment
The reunion of connective
tissue with a root surface on which viable
periodontal ligament tissue is present.
(Example is where biologic width (now
termed supracrestal tissue attachment)
existed before a flap was reflected and
when the flap is replaced, reattachment
occurs with the intact connective tissue
fibers.)
Reattachment:
The healing of a wound that does
not fully restore the architecture or
function of the part. (The primary example
is healing by a long junctional epithelium.
This is the body’s protective healing to
prevent ankylosis and root resorption.)
Repair:
_____ flap: all soft tissue
including the periosteum is reflected
exposing the underlying bone. (Most
commonly used flap, and also called a
mucoperiosteal flap.)
Full thickness flap:
________ flap: epithelium
and some connective tissue is reflected,
leaving periosteum and some connective
tissue overlying the bone.
Partial (split) thickness flap:
Removal of the
connective and epithelial
attachment circumferentially
with a curette
Curettage: