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Goals of pulp therapy Allowing the child to masticate with comfort. Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state. Maintenance.

Dec 15, 2015

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Mariano Hardin
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Page 1: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.
Page 2: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.
Page 3: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Goals of pulp therapy

Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.

Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.

Maintenance of tooth space and arch length.

Prevention of speech abnormalities.

Page 4: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Approximately 75% of teeth with deep caries have pulp exposure.

Page 5: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Why is it important to for the pedodontist to conserve pulpally involved teeth?

Page 6: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

premature extraction of pulpally involved teeth leads to loss of space

and subsequent problems concerning the development of occlusion in the permanent dentition.

Page 7: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Factors influencing success of pulp therapy:

Speed of carious attack.Depth of bacterial penetration into the

pulpal tissue.Type and amount of pulpal hemorrhage.The extent of pulp inflammation.Pulp age (mature and immature teeth)

Page 8: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Young dental pulp has a high degree of cellularity and vascularity.

Young pulp is ready for procedures concerned with the preservation of pulp vitality e.g.: indirect pulp capping and pulpotomy.

Page 9: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Evaluation of pulp vitality

Page 10: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Preoperative diagnosis is important and dictates the type of treatment to be carried out.

Accurate determination of the extent of pulp inflammation cannot be made short of histological examination.

Correlation between clinical symptoms and histological features is poor in exposed primary pulp.

Page 11: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Diagnostic considerations

Page 12: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Factors to be considered before clinical and radiographic evaluation for pulp therapy:

1. The length of time the tooth to be retained.

2. The restorability of the tooth.3. The status of the remaining

dentition.4. The patient and parent cooperation

(attendance for periodic evaluation).

Page 13: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

5.Physical condition of the patient:Success of pulp therapy depends on the absence of systemic disturbances.

Page 14: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

1)Endodontic treatment in patient with cardiac disorders can expose the patient to the risk of subacute bacterial endocarditis.

Page 15: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

2)Chronic illness, such as diabetes, nephritis, leukemia, tumors or any condition that causes depression of granulocytes and leucocytes counts are contraindicated for pulp therapy to avoid the possibility of acute infection.

Page 16: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.
Page 17: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Diagnostic information

History of painMobilitySensitivity to percussionCharacter of exposure siteEvaluation of hemorrhage at exposure siteRadiographic picture

Page 18: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

History of pain

A negative history of pain is not a reliable sign to diagnose the pulp status of primary teeth.

Children are often unable to recall the experience of pain they have short attention span.

Varying degree of pulp degeneration are seen without any history of pain.

The nerve element diminishes with time as the tooth approaches shedding.

Page 19: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Children with rampant caries have experienced pain since their early years and probably had no other experience and can recall only dental pain. Symptoms could be misleading because of their apprehension.History is sometimes misleading due to parental influence.

Page 20: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

characteristics of pain

It includes type of pain, duration, frequency, and provoking factors.

Sensitivity to thermal stimuli indicates vital pulp.

Page 21: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Pain relationship to pulp status Type and duration of pain provide a clue

as to:Whether the pulp inflammation is

mild chronic necrotic changes

Page 22: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Type of pain provoked or spontaneousDuration intermittent or continuous

Page 23: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Provoked pain : is temporary sensitivity to thermal changes in a deep carious lesion

or Pain associated with eating.or sensitivity to sweets The Provoked pain is usually reversible and disappears with removal of stimulus.

Page 24: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Type of pain

Pain associated with eating:History of momentary pain associated

with eating and disappears with removal of the stimulus indicates that there is only a thin layer of remaining dentine between the carious lesion and the pulp.

Page 25: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The Pain is probably due to:Pressure on the dentine floorChemical irritation of foodThermal irritation.

Page 26: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The pain probably indicates:No actual exposureReversible pulp statusA tooth that is good candidate for indirect

pulp capping or if accidentally exposed may be a good candidate for direct pulp capping or pulpotomy.

Page 27: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Spontaneous or unprovoked pain:

The pain is unprovoked and nocturnal; it awakes the child during night sleeps.

It is an acute continuous throbbing painIt is often an indication of a hyperemic pulp a

widespread inflammation of the pulp extending throughout the radicular part (irreversible).

Page 28: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

characteristics of pain:

Duration of pain:Temporary pain indicates reversible

pulpitis due to exposure of dentine to oral environmental factors due to leaking restoration or frank cavitations.

Persistent pain indicates widespread pulpitis.

Page 29: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Clinical implication of pain Reversible pulpitis: Pain provoked by thermal, chemical or mechanical irritants & is reduced or eliminated when the stimulus is removed.

Chronic pulpitis: intermittent dull aching pain.

Page 30: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Irreversible wide spreading pulpitis:

A history of spontaneous throbbing pain, particularly at night and keep the child awake, indicates extensive inflammation of the pulp.

This contraindicates vital pulp therapy.The tooth is indicated for extraction or

RCT.

Page 31: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Diagnostic clinical signs and symptoms.

Page 32: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

I Visual examination

1.Caries, trauma, missing or fractured restoration

Page 33: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

2.Gingival swelling, fistulas tract, tenderness or enlargement of lymph nodes are signs of necrotic pulp with acute or chronic abscess formation.

Page 34: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

3.Discoloration and loss of translucency of teeth are indications of pulp degeneration.

Page 35: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

II- Manipulation

Sensitivity to vertical percussion. Abnormal tooth mobility

associated with pain. Both are signs of advanced pulp

inflammation that proceeded deep apically to involve the periodontal ligament.

Page 36: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

II- Manipulation

• Older children undergo normal exfoliation mobility which should be

substantiated radiographically.• Sensitivity to percussion may also

be related to high restorations.

Page 37: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

III-Pulp Vitality Tests

Vitality tests are of little value for children. The use of this type of stimulation might

cause loss of the child’s cooperation.

Page 38: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

There are 2 types of vitality test:

1-Electrical pulp test.

2-Thermal pulp test.

Page 39: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Electric Pulp Test It is done by applying an electric

impulses on the mid-buccal dry tooth surface under test.

The result obtained from the tooth in question is compared to the contra lateral sound tooth.

The test indicates vitality condition not the degree of pulp pathological condition.

Page 40: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The difference may be :

Immediate rapid response indicating pulp hyperemia

Delay or no response indicating a non vital tooth pulp.

The test does not give reliable evidence of the degree of pulp inflammation in children.

Page 41: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

False positive results may be due to :

1- Excessive fear in young children.2- liquefaction of the radicular pulp tissues.3- Stimulation of the gingiva or periodontal ligament.4-contact with a vital tooth through metal crown or space maintainer.5- A single vital canal in association with non vital canals.

Page 42: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

False negative results may be due to:

Near exfoliation time due to reduced pulp neural element.

Post traumatic temporary parathesia.

Serial post trauma testing are needed to reveal progress of pulp health.

Page 43: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Thermal pulp test

It is done by applying :- hot items or cold items

HOT ITEMS

Hot gutta percha sticks on a moist or Vaseline coated tooth surface (mid buccal).

Page 44: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

COLD ITEMS

Cotton pellet socked with ethylchloride.

Ice stick in an anesthetic carpule.

Page 45: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Normal teeth respond to thermal changes, especially to cold, with pain that disappears when the stimulus is removed.

Page 46: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Persistence of pain, after removal of the stimulus, whether it is cold or heat, is indication of irreversible pulpitis.

Page 47: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Exposure site

It is important in diagnosing the extent of inflammation in an exposed pulp:

If during the removal of the last bits of caries, the pulp was exposed while the periphery of exposure shows sound dentine and there is little or no hemorrhage, there is a possibility that the exposure is mechanical and the pulp shows no or limited inflammation at the exposure site.

Page 48: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

If during the removal of the last bits of carious dentine with a spoon excavator, a large pod of caries was removed exposing the pulp and the periphery of the exposure still shows carious dentine, the tooth must be diagnosed as pathologically exposed with a pulp in an advanced stage of degeneration.

Page 49: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Exposure size

a true carious exposure is always accompanied with pulpal inflammation.

A pinpoint carious exposure may have varying degrees of pulpal inflammation (minimal, extensive to total necrosis)

Page 50: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

A massive exposure always causes a widespread inflammation or necrosis and the tooth is therefore not suitable for any form of vital pulp therapy except in young permanent teeth with incomplete root development.

Page 51: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

IV Radiographic interpretation:

Page 52: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

A recent periapical or bitewing x-ray film must be available.

Check the following:

Presence of succedanous toothRoot resorptionThe depth of caries; carious lesions near the

pulp require some types of pulp protection or treatment.

Deep restorations close to a pulp horn.Successful or failing previous pulpotomy or

pulpectomy.

Page 53: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The proximity of carious lesion to the pulp cannot be determined from a radiograph.

Page 54: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Pulpal changes: the presence of calcified bodies in the pulpal tissue indicating chronic inflammation, pulpal obliteration.

Page 55: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The supporting structures

The integrity of the lamina dura. Widening of periodontal space.

periapical rarefactions.

Page 56: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Bifurcation radiolucencies caused by degenerative breakdown of the pulp and spread of infection into bone.

Treatment: if the tooth is mobile, extraction if bone resorption is minimum, RCT

Page 57: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

For primary molars, furcation involvement is more common because of the porous pulpal floor due to the presence of accessory canals which makes drainage easier than through the apical foramina.

Page 58: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Pathologic external root resorption caused by pulpal degeneration and inflammation of supporting structure.Treatment: Pulpectomy or extraction

Page 59: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Internal root resorption caused by chronic inflammation or exposure treated by calcium hydroxide.Treatment:If severe pulpotomy is contraindicated.Extraction is recommended

Page 60: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Radiographic interpretation in children:Normal physiologic resorption of the roots of the primary teeth may be misleading suggesting pathological changes.

The young permanent teeth may have incompletely formed root ends giving the impression of periapical resorption.

Page 61: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

V-Extent of caries and size of exposure

The degree of inflammation is related to the extent and depth of caries and size of exposure.

Page 62: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

VI-Character of hemorrhage:

Bleeding that can be easily arrested with moistened cotton pellets is an indication of pulp vitality.

Page 63: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Profuse Bleeding Highly inflamed pulp.

No Bleeding Degenerating pulp.

The presence of Pus Non vital necrotic pulp.

Clinical implication of hemorrhage:

Page 64: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.
Page 65: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

The most difficult aspect of pulp therapy is to determine the health of the pulp or its stage of inflammation.

Page 66: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Pulp treatment procedures can be classified into two categories

1.Conservative: which includes approaches that aim at maintaining pulp vitality (vital pulp therapy).

2.Radical: including pulpectomy and root canal filling (non vital pulp therapy).

Page 67: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Oral health assessment

Contraindications-Health history

Pain symptoms?Hot? Cold? Sweet? Mobility? Swelling?

Radiographic assessmentNormal root length?

Yes

Consultation Referral

Extraction or Pulpectomy

Clinical assessmentSoft tissue lesion?

No

No Yes

Periapical / bifurcation or trifurcation bone involvement?

ExtractionYes No

Size

Small Large

Primary incisors:<4.5y:Pulpectomy>4.5y:ExtractionPrimary first molars:Extraction +Space maintainerPrimary second molars:<6y : Pulpectomy>6y : Extraction+ space maintainer

Primary incisors:ExtractionPrimary molars:Extraction

Yes

Restorable tooth?

No

No

Extraction

YesVital Pulp?

Primary incisors:<4.5y:Pulpectomy>4.5y:ExtractionPrimary second molars:<6y : Pulpectomy>6y : Extraction+ space maintainer

No

Yes

Pulpotomy + Stainless steel crown

Periodic assessmentRadiographic & clinical reevaluation

Pulp therapy: Primary teeth

Page 68: Goals of pulp therapy  Allowing the child to masticate with comfort.  Allowing the tooth to remain in the mouth in a nonpathogenic state.  Maintenance.

Oral health assessment

Contraindications-Health history

Pain symptoms?Hot? Cold? Sweet? Mobility? Swelling?

Radiographic assessmentPossible carious exposure

Yes

Consultation Referral

No

No Yes

Periapical pathosis

Routine operative procedure or small mechanical exposure Ca(OH)2 + restoration

Yes

Pulp therapy: Permanent teeth

Open Apex?

Yes

No

No

Clinical Assessment Carious lesion- Possible exposure?

Apexification Root canal therapy

Root canal therapy

Yes No

Restorable tooth? Routine operative procedure Ca(OH)2 + restoration

Yes

No

Extraction space maintainer

Indirect pulp therapy:Remove deep cariesNo pulp exposure!Ca(OH)2 + interimRestorative material + restoration

Periodic assessmentRadiographic & clinical reevaluation