Caries Interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

disease mechanism of caries

A

INFECTIOUS DISEASE

demineralization of tooth structure, dynamic process

requires presene of bacteria and a diet containing fermented carbohydrates

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2
Q

group of bacteria that plays a centeral role in caries mechanism

A

streptococcus mutans –> DEMINERALIZATION PROCESS

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3
Q

contributing factors to caries

A
  1. bacteria
    - plaque or biofilm
    streptoccocu mutans

Diet
- FERMENTABLE CARBS

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4
Q

Radiograh most useful in detecting careis?

A

BITEWING
then peri-apical

then panoramic
then cone beam CT

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5
Q

a good bitewing radiogrpah includes what?

A

from distal of canines for premolar shots and all the way back to the posterior of the molars for the molar shots

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6
Q

buccal and lingual caries are what class?

A

Class V
same with root surfaces
- class V

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7
Q

What is the caries susceptible zone?

A

CONTACT POINT – and down
interproximal
- between the contact point og the teeth and the gingival margin

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8
Q

do caries occur apiocal to the gingival margin

A

not usually

- but different with case of gingival recession pt.

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9
Q

DESCRIBE INCIPIENT LESION

A

DO NOT EXTEND INTO DEJ
- are within the enamel of the tooth
- caries susceptible zone
triangle with broad base at outer surface

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10
Q

describe location of interproximal careis

A

SPREAD ALONG DEJ

spread INTO DENTIN

  • second triangle with base AT DEJ
  • some cases, lesion may appear not to have oentrated the enamel
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11
Q

major difference we see with primary dentition

A

primary teeth have THINNER ENAMEL – so it can reach the dentin more quickly and seem to spread rapidly

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12
Q

general rule fo when to treat lesion vs not

A

if spread into DEJ (into the dentin – more likely for treatment vs incipient)

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13
Q

anterior caries

A

same type of thing happening where it is starting on the enamel

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14
Q

how to differentiate between a lesion and a radioluscent filling material?

A

lesion
- DIFFUSE MARGIN

restoration
- WELL-DEFINED MARGIN

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15
Q

OCCLUSAL CARIES

describe a large one

A
  1. easily observed
  2. appears as large, dark circles in the crowns
  3. pulp exposure can not always be determined
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16
Q

OCCLUSAL CARIES

describe a small one

A

not very effective at decting when looking radiographically (harder to)

may be seen as thin radiolucent line or cup shaed zone underlyinh occlusal ensmel

minimum to no changes in enamle

17
Q

what does he mean by rampant caries?

A

all over the dentiion

more likely to occur in the younger pt. population in the primary dentition

18
Q

rampant careis mostly seen in? other reasons

A

flourishing or spreading - due to lack of being checked and in younger patients with poor oral hygeine and poor diet

also DUE TO RADIATION TX CARIES

19
Q

describe root surface caries

A

Cratering the roots of the teeth, involving CEMENTUM

can be buccal/ lingual/ proximal

saucer like radiolucensy

maybe confused with cervical burnout

20
Q

how do root caries form?

A

due to gingival recession
- so only expect these in patietns who have poor periodontium and have recession (caries do not form from beneath gingiva)

21
Q

root surface caries could be confused with?

A

cervical burnout

*take note of the bone levels

22
Q

describe cervical burnout

A

apparent radiolucency below the CEJ due to anatomy or a gap betweeen the enamel and bone covering the root

BETWEEN BONE AND ENAMEL

no root caries unless there is alveolar bone loss

23
Q

describe recurent caries

A

around the margins of existing restorations

AKA Secondary caries

24
Q

general description of diagnostic confounders

A

these are things that may look like caries but are NOT

25
Q

general description of diagnostic confounders

A

these are things that may look like caries but are NOT

do NOT go purely by radiographic imaging but look at clinical exam too

26
Q

list of diagnostic confounders

A
  1. pits and fissures
  2. cervical burnout
  3. mach band effect
  4. dental anomolies
    - hypoplastic pitis
    - concavitities produced by wear
27
Q

buccal pit looks?

A

well - defined radioluscent circular

28
Q

MACH BAND EFFECT is a?

A

a diagnostic confounder

29
Q

describe mach band effect

A

OPTICAL ILLUSION
- the eye has a built in “edge-enhancment’ where there is lateral inhibitionin the neurons in the retina when looking at edges with slightly different shades of gray

anywhere where there is a slightly contrasting edge

30
Q

mach band effect can lead to?

A

false positives

- false diagnosis of caries

31
Q

enamel hypoplasia implication?

A

can look like a radioluscency

- but it is a dental anomaly and likely more localized to a tooth due to a developmental problem

32
Q

concavity seen? looks? what do you do?

A

looks maybe like a carious lesion but check it clinically as it can be produced by wear (like denture wearing)

33
Q

T/F you can accuratley see the extend of caries on a radiograph

A

false
- will always be deeper probably
- have structures overlapping it
-

34
Q

overlap in a bitewing could be from?

A

horizontal orientation of the xray beam

35
Q

remineralizaton occurs where? implication?

A

takes place on the outermost surface because mineral-containing solutions from saliva cannot diffuse into the body of the lesion

36
Q

Can x-rays tell you the activity of a carous lesion?

A

NO – cannot tell if it is active or arrested in a radiogrpah alone

37
Q

micro-radiograph?

A

can show a snapshot

38
Q

subtraction radiography

A

attempting to determine progress or not of two radiographs taken at different times to tell the difference over time