Paeds-trauma Flashcards
What is a laceration?
A soft tissue tear.
Why do you check if a pateint can open their mouth?
As if the patient had any jaw fractures, opening their mouth would be difficult.
How does trauma affect the patient’s occlusion?
It could prevent the teeth occluding together by propping them open or being the first thing that touches them when they touch.
Where do you check for foreign bodies after trauma?
Lodged in soft tissues
Penetrating wounds.
What does tooth mobility indicate?
Tooth displacement
Root fracture
Bone fracture (if several teeth on a segment are mobile)
How long does trauma review continue for after injury?
Sensibility tests are continued for at least 2 years after injury.
Name this fracture?
Enamel fracture
Name this fracture?
Enamel dentinal fracture.
Name this fracture
Enamel dentine pulp fracture.
Name this fracture & explain how you would further describe this?
This is a root fracture. It is further described by the 1/3 of the root that has fractured:
apical 1/3
middle 1/3
coronal 1/3
Compare these two fractures
On the left- UNcomplicated crown root fracture- the fracture is affecting enamel, dentine and into the root but is not affecting the pulp.
R- complicated crown root fracture- The pulp is also affected by the fracture.
Why would a tetanus prophyaxis be used as an emergency treatment for trauma?
In case bacteria would get into the wound.
Compare apexigensis with apexification?
Apexigenesis- when the tooth growth naturally continues after damages.
Apexification- when an intervention is needed to to provide an apex for the tooth.
When should you follow up fractures?
For enamel or enamel dentine
6-8 weeks and 1 year.
Enamel dentine pulp
6-8 weeks. 3 months. 6 months. 1 year.
Crown root fractures
1 week. 6-8 weeks. 3 months. 6 months. 1 year. yearly for 5 years
In what ways can we manage an enamel fracture?
Bond the fragment back to the tooth
Grind the sharp edges
Replace the fracture with a little bit of composite.
How do we manage an enamel dentine fracture?
We bond the fragment to the tooth.
Place a composite bandage.
Where would you look for a lost fragment?
On the ground
In soft tissues
In the lungs (Especially if patient is coughing or wheezing)
It may have been swallowed.
How do we check for root development in a radiograph?
We check for:
- width of the canal
- Length of the canal (if the root continues to grow it is still alive)
- Internal or external resorption.
- periapical pathologies.
Why is there more chance of damage with trauma of a mature tooth than an immature tooth?
A mature tooth has a small apex. The smaller apex means it is more likely for the nerves to be ripped and torn causing pulp death.
This is in contrast to a wider apex (immature tooth)
In an enamel dentine pulp fracture-
The pulp exposure is <1mm and <24 hours old.
How would you treat this?
Direct pulp cap.
- LA
- Isolate tooth with rubber dam
- Clean exposed area with saline
- Disinfect with sodium hypochlorite
- Place calcium hydroxide over the exposed site
- Seal the exposed resin with GIC or composite resin
- Restore tooth with composite.
In an enamel dentine pulp fracture-
The pulp exposure is bigger than 1mm. How do you treat this?
Partial pulpotomy.
- LA
- Isolate with rubber dam
- Clean exposed area with saline
- Disinfect with sodium hypochlorite
- Remove pulp to a depth and width of 1-2mm using a round diamond bur
- Place a saline moistened cotton pellet on the pulp & check haemostasis
- Apply calcium hydroxide
- Seal exposed dentine with GIC or composite.
- Restore with composite.
In an enamel dentine pulp fracture-
The pulp exposure is more than 24 hours old. How do you treat this?
Partial pulpotomy.
- LA
- Isolate with rubber dam
- Clean exposed area with saline
- Disinfect with sodium hypochlorite
- Remove pulp to a depth and width of 1-2mm using a round diamond bur
- Place a saline moistened cotton pellet on the pulp & check haemostasis
- Apply calcium hydroxide
- Seal exposed dentine with GIC or composite.
- Restore with composite.
In an enamel dentine pulp fracture-
You have started treating the pulp, but cannot arrest the bleeding. How do you manage this?
A full coronal pulpotomy.
- Remove all of the coronal pulp
- Place calcium hydroxide in the pulp chamber. (Thin layer so we have space for the vitrebond- prevents the dycal washing out)
- Seal with GIC lining & a quality coronal restoration.
Compare a concussion injury to a subluxation injury.
including review and treatment.
concussion- injury without increased mobility.
Subluxation- injury with increased mobility
Concussion review- 4 week,1y
Subluxation review- 2w,3m,6m,1y
Treatment for concussion- occlusal relief
Treatment for subluxation- a 2 week flexible splint
What is occlusal relief?
This is the use of RMGI to build up on the posterior teeth and prop open the bite. This takes the pressure off the tooth.
Discuss the sensibility test monitoring for concussion and subluxation injuries.
The thermal and electrical tests should be done at the time of injury.
There can be a short term lack of sensibility that returns
Poor sensibility at the start increases the chance of pulp necrosis.
What are we looking for in the radiographic monitoring of subluxation and concussion injuries.
We are looking for:
- Root development (how long and wide is the canal?)
(compairing the injured root to the root on the oposing side)
- The presence of internal and external inflammatory resorption.
What is an extrusion injury?
Tooth injury where there is partial or total seperation of the PDL which causes displacement out of the socket.
What do we see clinically and radiographically for an extrusion injury.
Clinically- We see the tooth incisal edge lower than the other teeth
Radiographically- We see a widened PDL space.
How do we treat an extrusion injury and when do we review?
Reposition under LA.
Patient wears a flexible splint for 2 weeks.
Review:
2 weeks
4weeks
8weeks
12 weeks
6 months
yearly for 5 years.
What is a lateral luxation injury?
Displacement of the tooth to the side (Not up or down)
The PDL is torn on one side and crushed on the other.
How do we treat a lateral luxation injury?
& when do we review it.
If presents early- Reposition under LA
If it presents late- Use orthodontic forces.
The patient should wear a flexible splint for 4 weeks.
It is reviewed at:
2 weeks
4 weeks
8 weeks
12 weeks
6 months
Yearly for 5 years.
What is an intrusion injury?
When the tooth is pushed back up into the alveolar process.
All the PDL around the tooth has been crushed against the alveolar bone (crushing injury)
What do we need to consider before treating an intrusion injury?
- is the apex open or closed?
- how retruded is the tooth (i.e. measure how far has the tooth been pushed up)
Compare the three treatment options for intrusion?
Spontaneous- leave the tooth to move on its own due to forces from the tongue and lips.
Orthodontic- use an orthodontic appliance to move the teeth back into position.
Surgical- use surgery to pull the tooth back down.
We then hold the tooth in place using a flexible splint for 4 weeks.
How do you treat an open apex tooth with up to 7mm intrusion?
Spontaneous
How do you treat an open apex tooth with more than 7mm intrusion?
Orthodontic or surgical.
How do you treat a closed apex tooth with up to 3mm intrusion?
spontaneous
How do you treat a closed apex tooth with 3-7mm intrusion?
orthodontic or surgical
How do you treat a closed apex tooth with more than 7mm intrusion?
surgical.
What is a high risk result of intrusion of a tooth with a closed apex?
There is a high risk of root resorption.
When do we review a patient with an intrusion injury?
2 weeks (checking splint)
4 weeks (removing the splint)
8 weeks
12 weeks
6 months
1 year
yearly for 5 years.
What is avulsion?
The tooth being completely knocked out.
What are the critical factors for successful healing from an avulsion injury?
EADT- extra-alveolar dry time
Type of storage medium (e.g. milk)
extra alveolar time (the total time outside of the mouth )
What do you do if a patient arrives with the tooth already implanted after an avulsion injury?
Leave it in &splint (unless the tooth is extremely dirty)
Use radiographs (to establish how much root there is and if the apex is open or closed)
What is the public advice regarding knocking out teeth?
Hold the tooth by the crown
Put the tooth back in the mouth (and get the child to bite down on some tissue)
Or store in cold fresh milk or saliva.
Seek dental advice
When should you not re-implant an avulsed tooth?
If the child is immunosuppressed or it is a primary tooth (it could damage the developing tooth germ)
Compare treatment of an open and closed apex avulsed teeth after <60 minutes EAT.
- LA
- Irrigate the socket with sterile saline
- Reimplant the tooth with slight distal pressure
- Flexible splint for 2 weeks.
- Antibiotics? and check tetanus status
Open apex:
closely monitor for success (continued root growth)
Closed apex:
Remove pulp as soon as possible. Leave antibiotic steroid paste first for 2 weeks before CaOH (which interfeers with PDL healing)
Obturate at 4-6 weeks.
Why do we use antibiotic paste first before CaOH when treating Aluvsion injuries?
CaOH interferes with PDL healing.
compare the review time for avulsion injuries with EAT <60 minutes for open and closed apexs.
Open apex:
2w, 4w, 2m,3m,6m, yearly.
Closed apex:
3m,6m,12m, yearly.