CSAR 41 - Dental root resorption Flashcards

1
Q

How does resorption occur?

A
  • Giant cells capable of resorbing all dentoalveolar hard tissues
  • Pre-dentine & pre-cementum contain potent inhibitors of resorption
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2
Q

How does transient root resorption occur, for example due to minor trauma?

A
  • Whenever fully mineralised dentine or cementum becomes exposed against ST, giant cells colonise & start to resorb
  • BUT giant cells need constant stimulation to continue
  • If there is no additional stimulation, resorption stops in 2-3 wks
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3
Q

What are giant cells stimulated by in progressive inflammatory root resorption?

A

Pressure, infected and some metabolic disorders

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4
Q

What does external root resorption look like on an X-ray?

A

Usually tramlines of pulp lines superimposed on top of lesion

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5
Q

How is infected root resorption managed?

A

• Predictably arrests if infection is eliminated
• If restorable, shape & clean (beware open apex)
• Dress canal with calcium hydroxide for at least 1 wk to kill microbes and create alkaline environment to
o KILL GIANT CELLS
o NEUTRALISE LACTIC ACID
o INHIBIT COLLAGENASES & ACID HYDROLASES
o STIMULATE ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE SECRETION
o PROMOTE REPAIR

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6
Q

What systemic disorders are linked with root resorption?

A

Paget’s disease
Hypo/hyperparathyroidism
Benign/malignant tumours

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7
Q

What is cervical resorption?

A
  • Particular form of progressive external inflammatory root resorption
  • Lesions begin in cervical area of tooth and have communication with mouth
  • Usually starts just below epithelial attachment (by minor trauma) of teeth and BURROWS into tooth
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8
Q

What is propagating stimuli in cervical resorption?

A

Pulp space infection
External plaque of tooth surface
Bleaching agents - diffuse though dentine

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9
Q

How is cervical resorption diagnosed?

A
  • Localised gingival swelling/bleeding
  • Signs of pulpitis/apical periodontitis
  • Usually symptom-free until vital canal invaded
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10
Q

What is the management of inflammatory root resorption with a vital pulp?

A

Improve plaque control
Flap, clean defect, repair
Monitor

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11
Q

What is the management of inflammatory root resorption with a non-vital pulp?

A

RCT
Flap, clean defects repair communication with mouth
Monitor

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12
Q

What 2 events cause internal inflammatory resorption?

A

Chronic pulp inflammation

Trauma to tooth

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13
Q

How does chronic pulp inflammation result in internal inflammatory resorption?

A
  1. Death of odontoblasts and exposure of fully mineralised dentine
  2. Invasion by giant cells, starting transient resorption
  3. Persistent partial pulp infection/inflammation and favourable connection to dentinal tubules
  4. Progressive inflammatory root resorption
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14
Q

How does trauma to tooth result in internal inflammatory resorption?

A
  1. Intrapulpal haemorrhage and clotting
  2. Compression of pulp chamber
  3. Death of odontoblasts and exposure of fully mineralised dentine
  4. Invasion by giant cells, starting transient resorption
  5. Persistent partial pulp infection/inflammation and favourable connection to dentinal tubules
  6. Progressive inflammatory root resorption
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15
Q

How is inflammatory root resorption diagnosed?

A

Few symptoms - chronic pulp inflammation
History of trauma
May appear as pink spot

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16
Q

How is internal inflammatory root resorption managed?

A

RCT - perfuse bleeding, helped with sodium hypochlorite
Mechanical and chemical cleaning
Thermoplastic root filling

17
Q

What is non-inflammatory root resorption?

A

Replacement resorption - dentoalveolar ankylosis

18
Q

When does non-inflammatory root resorption occur?

A

Commonly following luxation/avulsion where large areas of perio ligaments are destroyed

19
Q

Why should an avulsed tooth not be dried?

A

Loss of periodontal fibroblasts by desiccation

20
Q

How is periodontal regeneration in avulsed teeth promoted?

A

Systemic tetracycline