Diagnosis and treatment planning Flashcards

1
Q

what would radiographs tell you about a tooth

A
  • bone level
  • extent of decay
  • endo condition
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2
Q

what would perio charting show about a tooth

A
  • bone level
  • tissue condition
  • inflammation level
  • bleeding level
  • recession
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3
Q

what would indicate a crown or onlay

A

isthmus destruction greater than 1/2 intercuspal width

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4
Q

what would indicate a crown and likely a core build up

A

more than 50% of tooth structure is gone and loss of cuspal support

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5
Q

what are the treatment options for combined central and peripheral destruction of a tooth

A
  • core build up and corwn
  • possible RCT/post/ core/ crown
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6
Q

what would the “best” treatment option provide a patient

A

strengthen the tooth and provide excellent esthetics

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7
Q

what would the “better” treatment option provide a patient

A

strengthen the tooth

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8
Q

what would the “acceptable” treatment option provide a patient

A

repair the tooth but not necessarily improve the strength

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9
Q

how should you present treatment options

A

discuss risks, benefits, and alternative to each option including NO TX

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10
Q

what are the types of materials used for fixed restorations

A
  • gold
  • ceramic (eMax and Empress)
  • zirconia
  • zirconia fused to porcelain (PFZ)
  • composite formulations (CEREC)
  • metal
  • metal- ceramic (Porcelain fused to metal (PFM))
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11
Q

what are the pros and cons to gold

A
  • pros: gentle on gingiva, low wear on opposing teeth, longest lasting restoration material we have, can be burnished to seal small margins, very low risk of crown fracture, contacts can be added, easily polished
  • cons: not esthetic, labor intensive for lab tech
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12
Q

what are the pros and cons for ceramic crown

A
  • pros: tooth colored, still stronger than enamel by ~2x, most realistic and beautiful of all crown materials
  • cons: must use resin cements 90% of time, careful patient selection needed for molar corwns, require thicker margins as ceramics need a minumum amount of material to prevent fracture, fracture risk
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13
Q

what are the pros and cons of zirconia

A
  • pros: tooth colored, some iteratoins are 4x as strong as enamel, becoming more esthetic, easy for lab tech to make
  • cons: not all zirconia are the same, cannot easily add material to establish contacts, crown prep design still key for longevity, fracture risk with some formulations
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14
Q

what are the pros and cons to porcelain fused to zirconia

A
  • pros: tooth colored, some iterations are 4x as strong as enamel, becoming more esthetic, no dark metal to cover, white substance enhances esthetics with porcelain providing high esthetics
  • cons: not all zirconias are the same, cannot easily add material to establish contacts, crown preparation design still key for longevity
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15
Q

what are the pros and cons to CEREC composite formulations

A
  • pros: tooth colored, easy for the lab to make, milled restorations, mixture of composite and ceramic
  • cons: longevity still in research, cannot easily add material to establish contacts, crown prep design still key for longevity, esthetics still challenging
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16
Q

what are the pros and cons for PFM crowns

A
  • pros: tooth colored, metal substructure add strength, metal substructure enables PFMs to be used in longer bridges, can design where porcelain covers metal to provide excellent flexibility in design, metal substructure protects tooth even if porcelain fractures
  • cons: porcelain can fracture if not prepared correctly, metal collars can be unesthetic, porcelain can yellow over time
  • preparation is technique sensitie due to metal and porcelain components
17
Q

how long do single crowns last

A

average of 10-15 years depending on material

18
Q

how long does a conservative amalgam last

A

10-15 years

19
Q

how long does a conservative composite last

A

up to 10 years years

20
Q

what does treatment planning of a crown begin with

A

patient history

21
Q

what are the steps to diagnosis and treatment planning of a crown

A
  • patient hisotry
  • analyze patients overall oral health
  • analysis of tooth to be treated
  • identify options to restore the tooth
  • communicate and educate the patient
  • perform treatment
22
Q

how long does the average composite last

A

6 years