Zusammenfassung der Ressource
CDH Trauma Pulp
- Permenant teeth
- Enamel-dentine-pulp
fracture
- Treatment
- Open apex
- 0.5mm exposure and within 24 hours
- Direct pulp cap
- Material
- 1a) Pulp cap with MTA or CA(OH)2
- 1b) GIC
- 1c) Composite
- Large exposure OR >24 hours
- Pulpotomy
- 1a) Remove coronal pulp
- 1b) Arrest bleeding
- 1c) Apply MTA or Ca(OH)2 NOT ZOE
- 1d) GIC
- 1e) composite resin
- If pulpotomy doesn't work
- Pulpectomy
- Need to apexify (open apex),
either using Ca(OH)2 OR MTA
- Can also use regenerative
endo technique if open
- 1a) clean out and extirpate
- 1b) Triple antibiotic mixture in canal for 2 weeks
- 1c) Small needle 2mm past WL
to make apical tissues bleed
into tooth
- 1d) Get haemostats
- 1e) Seal up GIC
- Closed apex
- Young people with
closed apex >48hrs
- Pulpotomy
- Older patients with closed apex
- RCT
- Uncomplicated
crown-root fracture
- Treatment
- Emergency
- Stabilise loose segment to the adjacent
teeth
- Remove the fragment & restore
- 1a) locate fracture line
- 1b) remove mobile fragment
- 1c) Disinfect & suture any
lacerations
- 1d) GIC
- 1e) Composite resin
- Remove the fragment and
restore with gingivectomy +-
osteoplasty
- Remove the fragment &
extrude orthodontically
- Root fracture
- Treatment
- Coronal third/Cervical root fractures
- If the root fracture is near the cervical area of
the tooth, stabilization is benificial for a longer
period of time (up to 4 months).
- Endo?
- If displaced make sure you
reposition before you splint
- If really bad (into gingival tissues)
- Extract whole
tooth
- Extract coronal portion
- Extrude surgically with
orthodontist & post crown
- Apical & mid-root fractures
- Endo?
- Non-mobile & non-displaced
- Soft diet, keep an eye on vitality
- Mobile
- Flexible splint for
4 weeks.
- If displaced make sure you
reposition before you splint
- 20% get pulp necrosis
- Do endo if there is
no vitality and PAP
still after 3 months
- Cam do endo to the fracture
line then allow the rest to
resorb
- Alveolar fractures
- Treatment
- 1a) Manual repositioning or repositioning
using forceps of the displaced segment.
- 1b) Stabilize the segment with
flexible splinting for 4 weeks.
- Complicated crown-root
fracture
- Treatment
- Emergency
- Stabalise to adjacent teeth
- Remove fragment and restore if supragingival
- With pulpotomy (immature
apices) or pulpectomy
- Remove the fragment and restore with
gingivectomy +/- osteoplasty + RCT and post
- Remove the fragment and extrude
orthodontically + RCT and post
- Enamel #
- Still take PA and USO
- Primary teeth
- Enamel #
- Smooth sharp edges
- No radiographs recommended
- Enamel Dentine #
- No radiographs
- If small GIC layer
- If larger, GIC then composite
- Enamel Dentine pulp #
- Treatment options
- Partial pulpotomy
- Extraction
- Direct pulp cap
- Uncomplicated
Crown root #
- Treatment options
- Fragment removal only
- XLA the tooth