Indications for Surgery Flashcards

1
Q

What is the cutoff for A1c at school?

A

8

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2
Q

Where is the majority of of residual calculus located on the tooth?

A

At CEJ and line angles

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3
Q

Endpoint of _______:
Eliminate inflammation, bleeding on
probing, suppuration, disease
progression
Final goal of a functional,
comfortable, healthy dentition
with stable probing attachment
levels.

A

SRP

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4
Q

*: The ‘gold’ standard
Definition: Reconstitution of a lost or missing
part

• In Periodontics
• new periodontal ligament
• new cementum
• new bone

A

Regeneration*

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5
Q

In perio, what is regeneration?

A

New cementum
New PDL
New bone

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6
Q

• Osseous contouring with placement
of the flap margin at the alveolar
crest
• Creation of shallow sulci
• Ease of maintenance by therapist
and patient

A

Pocket Elimination

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7
Q

Is surgical or non surgical therapy more likely to have defects after treatment?

A

Non surgical is worse

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8
Q

Are single rooted or multirooted teeth more likely to get a better result from surgery?

A

Single rooted

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9
Q

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.)

A

Regeneration:

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10
Q

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).

A

New Attachment

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11
Q

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.)

A

Reattachment:

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12
Q

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.)

A

Repair:

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13
Q

_____ flap: all soft tissue
including the periosteum is reflected
exposing the underlying bone. (Most
commonly used flap, and also called a
mucoperiosteal flap.)

A

Full thickness flap:

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14
Q

________ flap: epithelium
and some connective tissue is reflected,
leaving periosteum and some connective
tissue overlying the bone.

A

Partial (split) thickness flap:

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15
Q

Removal of the
connective and epithelial
attachment circumferentially
with a curette

A

Curettage:

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16
Q

Removal
of the connective
and epithelial
attachment
circumferentially
with a scalpel

A

ENAP:

17
Q

The excision of the soft
tissue wall of the periodontal pocket. The
incision forms an external bevel or surface
that is exposed to the oral cavity.

A

Gingivectomy:

18
Q

Gingival deformities are
reshaped and reduced to create a normal
and functional form. The incision creates an
external bevel.

A

Gingivoplasty:

19
Q

_______ Indications
 Elimination of suprabony pockets which
can’t be adequately debrided without tissue
removal.
 Elimination of suprabony pockets if the
pocket wall is fibrous and firm and therefore
will not shrink after non-surgical therapy.
 Access for restorative with suprabony
pockets.
 These three indications are usually
corrected by flap surgery for access.
 Elimination of gingival enlargements (most
common indication for gingivectomy).**
 Elimination of asymmetrical or unesthetic
gingival topography (gingivectomy and/or
gingivoplasty).
 Exposure of unerupted teeth when
adequate keratinized tissue is present.

A

Gingivectomy indications

20
Q

What is most common indication for gingivectomy?

A

Elimination of gingival enlargements

21
Q

________ Contraindications
 Access is needed to infrabony defects.
 Base of pocket is apical to MG junction, or
when keratinized tissue is inadequate so
that a gingivectomy would remove all of the
keratinized tissue.
 Severely inflamed tissue (needs scaling
and root planing)
 Esthetics (anterior maxilla)
 Anatomical preclusion (lack of keratinized
tissue)

A

Gingivectomy contraindications

22
Q

 Advantages
 Relatively simple and fast.
 Disadvantages
 Limited applicability (suprabony defects)
 Longer healing period (4-5 weeks)
 More post-operative discomfort
 Less effective than flap surgery (no
access to osseous defects)

A

Gingivectomy

23
Q

 Surgical debridement of the root surface
and removal of granulation tissue from
osseous defects following reflection of a
mucoperiosteal flap.
 Modifications:
 Modified Widman
 Curtain procedure (maxillary anteriors)

A

Open Flap Debridement

24
Q

______ Indications
 Advanced disease where access is needed
to root surfaces and osseous defects.
 Where regeneration may be possible.
 To preserve tissue for esthetics.
 As an exploratory procedure or as part of
the non-surgical phase of treatment for
fibrous tissue.
 Less post-operative discomfort.

A

Open Flap indications

25
Q

______ Contraindications
 Patient is unable to tolerate a surgical
procedure.
 Increased tissue recession may result in
esthetic compromise.
 Potential of root caries and root sensitivity
due to greater root exposure post-
surgically.

A

Open Flap contraindications

26
Q
A

Social contract