Jane's 5 point Endodontics articles Flashcards

1
Q

Hale FA. Localized intrinsic staining of teeth due to pulpitis and pulp necrosis in dogs. Journal of Veterinary Dentistry. 2001;18(1):14-20.

A
  • Study of intrinsically stained teeth, entire tooth discoloured tan, purple or gray, 71 dogs 84 teeth total
  • Gross signs of total or partial pulp necrosis in 92% of these teeth (based on no bleeding at all, or no bleeding in coronal pulp, but bleeding in radicular pulp)
  • 57% of teeth had radiographic sign of endodontic disease
  • N.B. Only examined pulp on 64 teeth, and had rads on 84, so % numbers based on different denominators
  • Concluded risk of unnecessary endodontic therapy is <10% in discoloured teeth even without radiographic changes indicative of endodontic disease.
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2
Q

Feigin K, Shope B. Regenerative Endodontics. J Vet Dent. 2017;34(3):161-178.

A
  • 3 requirements for tissue regeneration:
    1. Appropriate source of stem cell/progenitor cells
    1. Growth factors that are capable of promoting stem cell differentiation
    1. Appropriate scaffold for the regulation of cell differentiation
  • 3 goals:
  • Primary: Elimination of infection and bony healing
  • Secondary: Increased root wall thickness/length
  • Tertiary: Positive response to vitality testing
  • Factors which affect results:
  • Effective disinfection and sealing of the coronal access
  • Diameter of the open apex: Have been successful with as small as 0.5 mm but much more successful if >1mm
  • Patient’s age: People 8-16 years of age
  • Suggest age in pets of 5 months – 2 years
  • Radiolucency should resolve over 6-12 months, Increase width of root wall after 12-24 months
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3
Q

Hennet P, Girard N. Surgical endodontics in dogs: A review. Journal of Veterinary Dentistry. 2005;22(3):148-156.

A

•While nifty to read, this is an old-school rehash of Cohens later chapters… skipperoo

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4
Q

Juriga S, Marretta SM, Niederberger V. Mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) for apexification of non-vital immature permanent teeth. J Vet Dent. 2007;24(4):274-277.

A
  • Step by step to accompany the article where they did this in a cat.
  • Apexification is a method of inducing the formation of a calcified barrier in a root with an open apex or the continued apical development of an incompletely formed root in teeth with necrotic pulp
  • Involves cleaning and debriding the root canal, then putting 2-3mm of MTA at the level of the apical foramen within the canal to induce cementogenesis at the apex
  • Usually 2 stages – placec MTA and then fill with CaOH or other medicament, then finish obturation at another time
  • Can do a 1 visit technique by adding a barrier of self curing GI over the top of the MTA and then obturating immediately
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5
Q

Niemiec BA. Assessment of vital pulp therapy for nine complicated crown fractures and fifty-four crown reductions in dogs and cats. Journal of Veterinary Dentistry. 2001;18(3):122-125.

A
  • Retrospective analysis of success/failure of VPT therapy for crown reductions and crown fractures, used CaOH as medicament for all of them.
  • Paper is a bit wacky, numbers aren’t totally consistent, vary from one place to another… – they did owner surveys to ask if teeth were still vital (90% thought they were), and rechecked 32 of them.
  • Of the teeth that actually got rechecked, 100% of the crown reductions were vital, and 100% of the CCF >7days before VPT teeth were non vital
  • In the 4 immature teeth with CCF’s, even though they became non vital, 3/4 teeth had additional radicular development to permit root canal treatment.
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