pulp & vitality testing Flashcards
What is used to conduct the cold stimulus testing?
Ethyl Chloride
What is used to carry out the hot stimulus test?
Gutta Percha
How to carry out the Ethyl Chloride test.
- Spray the Ethyl Chloride on a cotton pellet.
- Hold against the tooth in question.
- Compare to adjacent teeth which act as a control.
How to carry out the Gutta Percha Test.
- Dry the tooth.
- Apply vaseline to stop the gutta from sticking.
- Heat the gutta percha and apply to teeth.
How does the electric pulp test test for vitality?
Stimulates the nerve endings with a low current and a high potential difference voltage.
How to check normal/baseline values.
Conduct the vitality testing on the teeth adjacent to the one in question.
Which pulpal clinical disease is indicated by a EPT response at a higher current than normal?
Chronic pulpitis.
Which pulpal clinical disease has no response at any current.
Pulp Necrosis and Periodontal Apical Abscess
Examples of when the EPT may not be reliable.
- Pus-filled canal.
- Nervous Patient
- Recent Dental Trauma
- An insulating restoration
- Moisture contamination.
In what situations would sensibility testing result in a false positive?
- Pus filled canal.
- A nervous patient.
- Multiple root canals containing vital and non-vital pulp.
In what situations would sensibility testing record a false negative?
- If the patient was taking analgesics.
- Weak batteries in the EPT.
- Improper application of the test.
What are the symptoms of irreversible pulpitis?
- spontaneous pain which is usually throbbing.
- pain which radiates to the face or jaw.
- poorly localised to 1 tooth
- persistent pain lasting minutes-hours after hot/cold/sweet stimuli.
What are the symptoms of reversible pulpitis?
- transient pain from stimuli (lasts seconds)
- Poorly localised to 1 tooth.
Describe a Class I pulp exposure.
- Caused by Iatrogenic Damage or Trauma *
- no pre-op presence of a deep carious lesion.
- clinically judged to be sound dentine with healthy underlying pulp tissue.
Describe a Class II pulp exposure.
- Pre-op existence of a deep carious lesion with pulp exposure *
- occurs due to bacterial invasion and causes inflamed pulp tissue.