Hypodontia Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypodontia?

A

Congenital absence of one or more teeth.

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2
Q

What is anodontia?

A

Complete absence of teeth.

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3
Q

What is classed as severe hypodontia?

A

Congenital absence of 6 or more teeth.

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4
Q

Which teeth are most affected in hypodontia?

A

8’s
Lower 5’s and upper 5’s
Upper 2’s
Lower incisors

Usually the last in the series.

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5
Q

What are some of the associated problems in hypodontia?

A

Microdontia
Malformation of other teeth
Short root anomaly
Impaction
Delayed formation and/or delayed eruption of other teeth
Crowding and/or malposition of other teeth
Maxillary canine/first premolar transposition
Taurodontism
Enamel hypoplasia
Entered craniofacial growth

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6
Q

What is the aetiology of hypodontia?

A

Non-syndromic- mutations in at least 3 genes associated with missing teeth in non-syndromic hypodontia.
Familial
Sporadic

Syndromic- cleft lip and palate, anhydrotic ectodermal dysplasia

Environmental- trauma, radiotherapy.chemotherapt.

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7
Q

What is the presentation of hypodontia?

A

Delayed or asymmetric eruption of teeth- disorder sequence, 6 months between the contralateral tooth erupting.

Retained or infra-occluded deciduous teeth

Absent deciduous teeth

Tooth form

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8
Q

What are some of the issues associated with infra-occluded teeth?

A

Tooth has been ankylosed to the bone but the bone has continued to grow around it- looks like the tooth is sinking.

Over-eruption of opposing teeth

Tipping of adjacent teeth- extraction more difficult and difficult for restorative work afterwards- not enough space.

Functional impairment

Aesthetic impairment

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9
Q

What specialists would be involved in a hypodontia case?

A

Orthodontics
Restorative
Paediatrics
Oral surgery

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10
Q

What is the hypodontia care pathway?

A

GDP recognition
Referral to specialist orthodontist
- initial assessment here and then MDT.

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11
Q

What are the keys to successful management of hypodontia cases?

A

Inter-disciplinary team
Joint assessment and treatment planning with precise aims
Joint collaboration at transitional stages of treatment
Follow up of treated cases

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12
Q

Describe the assessment and planning of hypodontia cases.

A

History
Extra-oral examination
Intra-oral examination- ortho and restorative aspects
Investigations
Problem list
Definitive plan
Retention/maintenance

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13
Q

What aspects of the intra-oral examination are important in hypodontia cases?

A

How big is the space that we need to restore?
Do they have a high smile line?
How big are the adjacent teeth beside the tooth you are restoring?

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14
Q

What investigations might be required?

A

Study models
Planning models- diagnostic wax up of what the teeth will look like after restorative treatment
Radiographs- OPT
Photographs
CBCT- localise ectopic teeth an determine extent of bone for implant placement

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15
Q

What are the management options for hypodontia cases?

A

Accept

Restorative alone- using composite to close a diastema

Orthodontics alone

Combined orthodontics and restorative treatment

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16
Q

What factors will influence the choice of treatment?

A

Satisfies expected aesthetic objectives
Least invasive
Satisfied expected functional objectives

17
Q

What is the management options for missing laterals?

A

Space close
- simple space closure- close the space orthodontically and that’s it.
- Space close plus- close the space and then some amendments- tooth colour, alterations to tooth shape and size, gingival architecture- i.e. do this to canines to make them look like laterals.

18
Q

What are the advantages of space closure and space closure plus?

A

No prosthesis- low maintenance,
Good aesthetics with appropriate ortho and restorative input
Can be done at an early age

19
Q

What are the space open options?

A

RBB
Implant
Partial denture

Less commonly- conventional bonded bridge, auto-transplantation.

20
Q

Describe the advantages and disadvantages of RRB in hypodontia cases?

A

Advantages
- Can be done when the patient is young
- Doesn’t involve complex surgical procedures
- Well tolerated by the patient
- Relatively simple
- Non-destructive

Disadvantages
- Need to wait 3 months before embarking on firxed pros after ortho treatment.
- placing an RBB in a canine position has a lower success rate than in a lateral position.
- lower success rate than implants.
- RPD usually required until Rob can be fitted.
- Failure rate
- Appearance sometimes not good

21
Q

Why is it not advised to place a RRB in a canine position?

A

Canine is exposed to a lot of force during lateral excursion of the mandible
- more likely to fail.

Canine is an ideal abutment tooth to replace the lateral incisor.

22
Q

Why is the canine an ideal abutment tooth for a RRB?

A

Large root to crown ratio, more bulbous tooth, crown dimensions, less shine through.

23
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of an RPD in hypodontia cases?

A

Advantages-
- Can replace lots of teeth in the same arch
- Can be used to replace soft tissue
- Can be done immediately after treatment
- Can be done when the patient is young

Disadvantages
- might not be well tolerated
- Removable appliance, risk of falling out.

24
Q

Describe the key differences between RRB and implants.

A

Cannot do an implant until the patient has finished growing- now 21+

Need a minimum of 7mm space- both coronary and in the bone.

Often need a bone graft

Technically very demanding in aesthetic zone

Significant cost

Significant extra time to do

Success rate is higher for implants- greater than 95%.

25
Q

What would happen if you gave someone an implant that was still growing?

A

The implant would become ankylosed- the bone would continue to grow around it.