Table of Contents: Cclusion Omplete Entures Emovable Artial Entures Ixed Rosthodontics
Table of Contents: Cclusion Omplete Entures Emovable Artial Entures Ixed Rosthodontics
Table of Contents: Cclusion Omplete Entures Emovable Artial Entures Ixed Rosthodontics
of Contents
ENDODONTICS 2
OPERATIVE DENTISTRY 9
PERIODONTICS 30
PROSTHODONTICS 41
OCCLUSION 41
COMPLETE DENTURES 44
REMOVABLE PARTIAL DENTURES 47
FIXED PROSTHODONTICS 50
PEDIATRICS 58
ORTHODONTICS 64
ORAL DIAGNOSIS 73
ORAL PATHOLOGY 73
PHARMACOLOGY 78
PATIENT MANAGEMENT 79
MISCELLANEOUS TOPICS 88
Dental Trauma in Children: boy > girls, maxillary anterior most common, increased overjet
(>6mm) more often; prescribe mouth guards to prevent frequency and severity of injuries
Ellis Classification Trauma Description/Treatment
Class I Crown Fracture: Enamel Smooth
only
Class II Crown Fracture: Enamel, Perm: Restore
Dentin Prim: Smooth/Restore
Class III Crown Fracture: Enamel, <24hrs Perm: Direct pulp cap
Dentin, Pulp >24hrs Perm: Cvek PO
>72hrs Perm: PO
Vital prim: PO
Non-vital prim: PE
Prim with internal or external resorption: Ext
- Concussion Let the tooth rest
Class IV Traumatized tooth has Open Apex Tx: allow to re-erupt; if >7mm
become non-vital—i.e reposition surgically or orthodontically
Intrusion Closed Apex Tx: Reposition, flexible splint
(4wks), RCT
<3mm: allow re-erupt
3-7mm: reposition surgically or
orthodontically
>7mm: reposition surgically
Primary Teeth: spontaneously re-erupt; can
cause hypoplasia, hypocalcification,
dilaceration
Class V Luxation Subluxation: Flexible splint 1-2wks
Lateral Luxation/ Extrusion:
Open Apex/Primary Tx: reposition, flexible
splint (7-14days), monitor; >3mm -> extract
Closed Apex Tx: reposition, flexible splint (7-
14days), RCT if needed
Class VI Avulsion (Extraalveolar Closed Apex EADT <60mins: reimplant, splint
dry time (EADT) is (7-10days), antibiotics, RCT (7-10 days later)
critical) Open Apex EADT <60mins: place the tooth in
doxycycline, reimplant, splint (7-10days),
antibiotics; no RCT but apexification at first
sign of infected pulp
Open Apex EADT >60mins: not usually
indicated but reimplant, splint (7-10days), RCT
out of mouth or apexification initiated
Closed Apex EADT >60mins: may or may not
reimplant, immerse tooth in 2.4% sodium
fluoride with pH of 5.5 for 5 minutes, splint (7-
10days), antibiotics, RCT (7-10 days later),
plan for implant
Not recommended to reimplant primary teeth
- Horizontal Root Fracture 3 PAs and 1 occlusal to ID fracture
(coronal displaced, apical Vital: Splint
not displaced) Coronal: rigid, 6-12 weeks
Midroot: flexible, 3 weeks
Apical: consider flexible, 2 weeks; not
necessary
Non-vital: RCT
- Vertical Root Fracture Extraction
(isolated probing depth & Multi-rooted tooth: Hemisection
RL in the apical region of
the middle root)
- Cracked Tooth Syndrome Transillumination
Vital: splint & observe or crown
Non-vital: RCT & crown
Cracked Tooth Syndrome
- Sustained pain during biting, pain only on release of biting pressure; sensitive to thermal
changes
- Mostly occur on Mandibular 1st Molars
External Resorption:
- Primary: cementoblastic layer in PDL is damaged
- Permanent: margins ragged and poorly defined, lesions moves in radiographs
- Replacement: ankylosis, replaces PDL with bone; Tx: none
- Cervical: trauma or nonvital bleaching, biologic width area, pink spot; Tx: remove
granulation & repair with restoration
- Inflammatory root: bacteria, granulation tissue, RL; tx: RCT
- Apical Resorption: primary teeth only due to orthodontic forces
- Inflammatory & Replacement most commonly associated with Luxation
Internal Resorption:
- Primary: odontoblastic layer in pulp is damaged
- Permanent: Margins are sharp and well-defined, lesion doesn’t move in radiographs; tx:
RCT
Endodontic-Periodontic Lesions
- Endo -> Perio but Perio rarely leads to Endo
- Primary Endo: inflammation at or near apex; non-vital pulp with narrow deep pocket
- Primary Perio: inflammation starts at sulculs and moves down to apex; vital pulp with
broad-based pocket formation
- Primary Perio with Endo: deep pocketing; treat endo then perio
- True Combined lesion: indistinguishable; treat endo then perio
Success & Failure
- Principles of success: microbial disinfection, debridement, obturation
- Obturation most critical step & cause of most treatment failures
Operative Dentistry
Apatite
- Apatite: mineral group Ca5(PO4)3(X)
o Hydroxyapatite (OH-): hexagonal, white
powder, low bioresorption rate
o Carbonate-substituted hydroxyapatite
(CHA): main component of enamel and
dentin
§ Enamel rod forms head & tail; tail
portion (more organic and more
mineral content) susceptible to
caries
§ Carbonate substitution increases solubility of hydroxyapatite (easier to
decay)
o Fluorapatite (F-)
o Chlorapatite (Cl-)
Stephan Curve
- X-axis: Time (minutes); Y-axis: Plaque & pH
- Mouth pH: 7; Dentin & Cementum pH: 6.2-6.7
- Critical pH of tooth enamel: 5.5; anything below leads to demineralization
- Demineralization occurs with addition of H+ molecule (sugar, acid, GERD, food/drinks)
o Frequency of sugar is more important than amount
- Remineralization occurs with addition of HCO3- molecule (saliva, MI paste)
How does Fluoride work?
- Remineralization of tooth structure with addition of F- molecule (fluoridated water,
toothpaste, etc)
- Decreasing enamel solubility (lowering critical pH to 4.5)
- Interfering with metabolic activity of cariogenic bacteria
Caries: multifactorial transmissible infectious dynamic oral disease
- Result of interaction of cariogenic oral flora (biofilm) with fermentable dietary
carbohydrates (sugar) on the tooth surface (host) over time-modeled by modified Keyes-
Jordan diagram
- Balance between demineralization and remineralization, pathologic and protective factors
Progress of Lesions
- Pit & Fissures lesions -> inverted V-shape
- Smooth-surface lesions -> V-shaped
- Root-surface lesions -> can progress rapidly,
- Infected dentin: superficial, wet/soft,
mushy, necrotic
- Affected dentin: deeper, dry, leather,
demineralized but not invaded by bacteria
- Intact surface is essential for remineralization
- Cavitation: irreversible process that requires restorative tx
- May take 1-2 years to form an actual enamel cavitation
- Order: Enamel demineralization -> Dentin demineralization -> Enamel cavitation -> Dentin
cavitation
Caries Terms
- Extent
o Incipient/reversible: on smooth surface, appears opaque white when air-dried and
seems to disappear when wet
o Cavitated/irreversible: enamel surface is broken (not intact) and usually the lesion
has advanced into the dentin
- Location
o Simple: 1 surface
o Compound: 2 surfaces
o Complex: 3 or more surfaces
- Rate
o Acute/rampant: rapidly damages tooth structure, light-colored, soft, infectious
o Chronic/slow: demineralized tooth structure that is almost remineralized,
discolored, fairly hard
o Arrested: brown/black, hard, caries-resistant if exposed to fluoride (dentinal lesion
has sclerotic dentin)
Microbiology
- Streptococcus mutans -> enamel caries
o Gram (+) cocci
o Glucosyltransferase (GTF) converts sucrose to glucans and fructans, extracellular
polysaccharides that help stick it to tooth
o Acidogenic and aciduric: converts sucrose into lactic acid and tolerates acid well
o Bacteriocins: kill off competing microbes
- Lactobacillus -> dentinal caries
- Actinomyces -> root caries
Saliva
- Glycoproteins: large molecules that agglutinate bacteria together to help eliminate them
through swallowing
- Urea and other buffers: dilute bacterial acid byproducts
- Lysozyme: destroys cell walls
- Lactoferrin: actively binds iron which is important for bacterial enzymes
- Lactoperoxidase: inactivates some bacterial enzymes
- sIgA: salivary antibodies against bacteria
- Calcium, phosphate, and fluoride ions help with remineralization
- Statherin, cystatin, histatin, and proline- rich proteins promote remineralization
Clinical Exam for Caries
- Visual changes in tooth surface texture or color
o Dry, well-lit field
o Incipient caries partially or totally disappear from vision by wetting, while
hypocalcification does not
- Tactile sensation with careful use of explorer: careful not to cavitate an incipient lesion with
sharp explorer tip
- Radiographs
o White spot= hardly visible
o Enamel cavitation= evident
o Dentinal lesion= clearly evident
o Lesions are always smaller radiographically
o Tooth needs 30-40% mineral loss to be detected radiographically
o PA for anterior; BW for posterior
- Transillumination
o Shine bright light through contact area of anterior teeth
o Shadows can indicate interproximal caries
o Also useful for distinguishing craze lines (whole tooth lit up) and fractures (part of
tooth lit up)
New technology: Laser fluorescence (DIAGNOdent), digital imaging fiberoptic transillumination
(DIFOTI), quantitative light-induced fluorescence (QLF), electrical conductance or impedance
measurement
Amalgam Exam
- Bluish hue due to corrosion products does not classify as defective
- Marginal gap or ditching >0.5mm is judge carious or caries-prone
- Proximal overhang, voids, fracture lines
Tooth Exam
- Erosion: caused by acidic foods/beverages or gastric acid
- Abrasion: loss of tooth structure by mechanical wear (i.e. toothbrushing, porcelain)
- Attrition: occlusal wear from functional contacts with opposing natural teeth
- Abfraction: due to tooth flexure
- Hypersensitivity: exposure of dentinal tubules in root surfaces
o Hydrodynamic theory: postulates that pain results from dentinal fluid movement
that stimulates mechanoreceptos near the pre-dentin
o Some causes of fluid shifts include temp change, air-drying, and osmotic pressure
Criteria for Restoring Teeth
- High caries risk: 2 or more active caries, large number of restorations, poor dietary habits,
low salivary flow, poor oral hygiene, low fluoride exposure, unusual tooth morphology
- Lesion extends to DEJ
- Cavitation
Dental Hand Instruments
- Non-cutting: mirrors, explorers (Shepherd’s hook 23, pigtail 2, back action 17), probes (UNC
15, Williams, marquis), condensers, ball burnisher; nib & face working end
- Cutting: blade & cutting edge working end
o Scalers -> Calculus; don’t follow cutting instrument formula
§ Universal: anywhere
§ Gracey’s: specific area
• 1-2, 3-4: anterior
• 5-6: anterior and PMs
• 7-8,9-10: posterior F/L
• 11-12: posterior, mesial
• 13-14: posterior, distal
§ Sickle scaler: supraG calculus
§ Curette: subG calculus
o Excavators -> Dentin
§ Spoon: 11.5-7-14
§ Black Spoon: 15-8-14
o Chisels -> Enamel
§ Enamel hatchet (10-7-14): used for planing walls
§ Bin-Angle Chisel (10-7-8): used for planing walls
§ Gingival Margin Trimmer: used for planing enamel/beveling at gingival floor
of preparation
• Distal (10-95-7-14)
• Mesial (10-80-7-14)
o Other -> Restoration
§ Discoid-cleoid: carving and contouring amalgam
• Cleoid: claw-life end for craving grooves
• Discoid: round end for craving pits and fossas
§ Hollenback carver: placing, carving, and contouring amalgam
Instrument Design: handle, shank, working end
Cutting Instrument Formula
- 1st number: blade width (10=1mm)
- 2nd number: cutting edge angle (omitted if perpendicular to blade)
- 3rd number: blade length (7=7mm)
- 4th number: blade angle (14=14% of 360)
Instrument Grasp
- Pen versus modified pen grasp
- All grasps require firm finger rests (adjacent teeth, maxilla, mandible*)
- Use short working radius (more control, accuracy, protection)
Rotary Instruments
- Low speed handpiece (<12,000 rpm): large round bur for safe caries removal
- Medium-speed handpiece (12,000-200,000rpm)
- High-speed handpiece (>200,000 rpm)
- Rheostat: peddle
Burs: shank, neck, head (cutting part)
- Tungsten Carbide: better for end-cutting, produce lower heart (punch cuts, smooth walls,
remove amalgam, create retention)
- Diamond: better for side-cutting, produce higher heat, greater hardness (crown preps,
bevels, enameloplasty)
- Carbide: the greater the blades (flutes), the more smooth, but the less cutting efficiency
o Cutting= 6 blades
o Finishing= 12 blades
o Fine finishing= 18-24 blades
o Ultra fine finishing= 30-40 blades
- Diamond: the finer the grit, the less aggressive
- 245: 3mm x 0.8mm, pear-shaped
- 330: 1.5mm x 0.8mm, pear-shaped, smaller size is helpful for pediatric preps
- 169L: tapered fissure
Hazards
- Pulp: vibration, heat, desiccation
- Soft tissue, eyes, inhalation
- Ears: potential hearing loss depends on intensity of loudness, frequency, duration of noise,
and susceptibility of individual
GV Black’s Classification
- Class I, II, III, IV, V
- Class VI: only incisal edge of anterior or cusp tip of posterior
Cavity Preparation
- Cavosurface margin: where the cavity preparation
meets the original tooth surface
- External walls: contacts cavosurface margin
- Internal walls
- Line angle: junction of two walls
- Point angle: junction of three walls
Initial Tooth Preparation
- Outline Form
o External outline of the tooth surface to be included in the preparation along the
cavosurface margin
o Defined by the extent of the carious lesion
o Extension to sound tooth structure at an initial depth of 0.2mm into dentin, 1.5mm
into tooth
o Extend gingival floor to get 0.5mm clearance always
o Extend facial and lingual proximal walls to get 0.5mm clearance UNLESS it would
require unreasonable removal of sound tooth structure to break the contact
o Remove all friable and unsupported enamel
§ Friable: demineralized; bonding agent is not as effective
§ Unsupported: undermined; there is no underlying dentin to support it under
cyclic loading, can be left if in non-stress bearing area
- Primary Resistance Form: prevention of tooth or restoration fracture from occlusal forces
o Flat pulpal and gingival floor
o If extension of prep is more than half the distance from primary groove to cusp tip
consider capping the cusp (i.e onlay, crown)
o Rounded internal line angles
- Primary Retention Form: prevention of displacement of restorative material
o Convergent walls prevent occlusal displacement
o Dovetail prevents proximal displacement
o Rely on bonding if using composite
- Convenience Form: improve access and visibility as needed
Final Tooth Preparation
- Remaining dentin caries removal: remove all infected dentin
- Pulp protection
- Secondary resistance and retention form
o Retentive grooves
o Beveled enamel margins
o Slots: at least 1mm deep and long, 0.5mm inside DEJ
o Pins: self-threaded pin most common; usually where a vertical wall is missing
- Finishing external walls: establish design and smoothness of cavosurface margin
Sealer/Desensitizer
- Used for sensitivity for >2mm of dentin remaining
- Occludes dentinal tubules by cross-linking tubular proteins
- Gluma: 5% glutaraldehyde + 35% HEMA (hydroxyethyl methacrylate) + water
Liner (CaOH or RMGI)
- Used for direct or near pulp exposures
- Provides barrier to protect dentin from residual reactants of restoration and oral fluids
- Electrical insulation, thermal protection
- Pulpal treatment (formation of tertiary dentin)
Base (RMGI or GI cement)
- Used for metal restorations and when liner is used
- Thermal protection (especially under amalgam and gold)
- Distributes local stress across all underlying dentin
Remaining Dentin Thickness & How to Treat
- Amalgam
o >2mm -> sealer
o 0.5-2mm -> base, sealer
o <0.5mm -> liner, base, sealer
- Composite
o >0.5mm -> bond
o <0.5mm -> liner, base, bone
- Gold or Ceramic
o >2mm -> cement
o 0.5-2mm -> cement (2mm thick)
o <0.5mm -> liner, base, cement
Moisture Control: dry angle (cellulose wafer), local anesthetic
Amalgam Preparation
- Use carbide bur for smooth walls
- Retention: occlusal convergence, grooves, slots, pins
- Resistance for tooth: 90 cavosurface margin, maintain cusps and marginal ridges, remove
unsupported or weakened tooth structure, pins
- Resistance for amalgam: 90 amalgam margin, 1.5-2mm depth for adequate thickness of
amalgam
Composite Preparation
- Use a coarse diamond for rough walls
- Same as amalgam except no need for retentive features, occlusal convergence, and uniform
depth
Dental Amalgam: a mixture of 50% mercury and 50% metal alloy
- Silver -> strength
- Tin -> corrosion; helps to an extent seal the restoration
- Copper -> strength
o <12%: results in all gamma phases
o >12%: results in only gamma and gamma-1 (less corrosion and creep)
- Zinc -> deoxidizer, but excess expansion if moisture contamination
- Spherical: microspheres of various sizes, easier to condense, stronger, sets faster
- Admixed: mixture of irregular and spherical pieces, require more condensation forces,
better proximal contacts
- Indications: mod to large lesions, heavy occlusal loading, hard to isolate, non-esthetic, lesion
extends onto root surface, foundation or abutment
- Contraindications: very small class VI lesion, high esthetic demands, allergy to metals
Trituration: alloy particle is coated by mercury
- Gamma: unreacted silver-tin
- Gamma-1: strong silver-mercury matrix
- Gamma-2: weak tin-mercury
- Normal mix: shiny, smooth
- Over: warm, wet, soft, sets too quickly
- Under: dry, dull, crumbly, sets too quickly
Carving: discoid-cleoid, Hollenbeck carver, explorer tip, amalgam knife (gingival excess on proximal
surfaces, gingival embrasure)
Marginal Ridge Fracture
- Axiopulpal line angle not rounded
- Marginal ridge left too high, occlusal embrasure form incorrect, improper removal of
matrix, overzealous carving
Class V Amalgam
- Prep walls diverge occlusally due to orientation of enamel rods
- Four corner coves, occlusal and gingival line angle grooves, or circumferential grooves are
all equally effective for retention
Mercury Toxicity
- Inhalation is biggest risk
- If spills occurs, use a special vacuum system and then apply sulfur powder on the floor
- Acute mercury toxicity: muscle weakness (hypotonia), loss of hair, weight loss/GI disorders,
exhaustion
Mercury Forms
- Methylmercury: organic, most toxic
- Elemental: liquid metallic, in dental amalgam
- Mercury salts: inorganic
Enamel Bonding: parallel enamel rods transform to high energy surface by increasing its surface
free energy and increasing wettability which allows phosphoric acid to flow into irregularities that
form interlock when polymerized
Dentin Bonding: equally as strong, but not as reliable or predictable
- Composition: has more organic matter and water
- Structure: collagen is a “bowl of spaghetti”
- Depth: fluid-filled dentinal tubules are much larger and more numerous near pulp, so less
bond strength the deeper you are
- Smear layer: “sawdust” from cutting, decreases dentin permeability
Steps for Bonding:
1. Etch
o Etch for 15 seconds
o 30-40% phosphoric acid
o Removes smear layer
o Etched enamel -> chalky or frosty white, creates microporosities
o Etched dentin -> exposes layer of collagen, widens dentinal tubules
o Rinse for 10 seconds and leave moist
2. Primer
o HEMA (hydroxyethyl methacrylate): Enamel-Dentin Bonding Systems
monomer and solvent; can cause allergic Etch and Rinse Self-Etch systems-
contact dermatitis Systems leave smear layer
o Infiltrates enamel prisms and dentinal Acid Acid Acid Acid
tubules Primer Primer
Primer Primer
o Prevents collagen collapse Adhesive
o Lightly air dry after application Adhesive Adhesive Adhesive
3. Bond/Sealer/Adhesive Self-Etch least Effective!!
o Bis-GMA (bisphenol A-glycidyl
methacrylate)
o Light cure!
o Chemically bonds to underlying primer and overlying composite resin through MMA
bonds
o Hybrid Layer: mechanical interface between tooth and adhesive
§ Resin tags: adhesive resins lock into the microporosities of etched enamel
and intratubular dentin
§ Key= micromechanical bond!
Composite Composition
- Resin matrix (Bis-GMA): leaching of bisphenol A (BPA) can occur through wear of
composite or with uncured resin; adverse health effects is negligible
- Filler particles (Barium Silica): RO, affect properties of the composite
- Coupling agent (Silane): promote adhesion between the two
- Light cure or chemical polymerization/cross-linking from a liquid to a solid
Composite Types
- Macrofill (80%, 8): conventional, difficult to smooth
- Microfill (40%, 0.04): weak, good polish and wear resistance
- Hybrid (80%, 1): smooth surface
- Nanofill (0.005): most popular used today
Self-Cure vs Light-Cure Composites
- Nanohybrid: nonfill plus other composites Self-Cure Light-Cure
- Flowable: very low filler amount, lower Two-paste system Single-paste system
wear resistance Benzoyl peroxide Camphorquinone is
- Packable: high filler amount, viscous is initiator photoinitiator
- Larger fillers -> more strength Tertiary amine is 468nm light needed
- Higher filler content -> less water activator to initiate
absorption polymerization
Polymerization Shrinkage
- Composite shrink as they polymerize (2-3%)
- Configuration factor (C-factor) is the ratio of bound to unbound surfaces
o Restoration Class (I-IV) is inversely related to C-factor
o Higher C-factor means more chance for shrinkage, microleakage, and post-operative
sensitivity
Spectrum of Tooth-Colored Restorations
Glass Ionomer Resin-Modified Compomer Ionomer- Composite Resin
Glass Ionomer (Polyacid- Modified
Modified Resin Composite
Composite)
Acid: polyacrylic acid Set by an acid- Anhydrous Set only by a Matrix
Base: base and free single pastes polymerization Filler
fluoroaluminosilicate radical addition that contain mechanism Light or self cure
glass polymerization major but contain Micromechanical
Self-adhesion to tooth (light and/or ingredients of ion-leachable bond
Rely on chemical bone chemical cure) both CR and GI glasses in an No fluoride
Fluoride release More rapid except water attempt to release
Weaker polymerization Attracted use in achieve Stronger
thanks to free Ortho fluoride
radical Slower release
initiation polymerization Least common
Fluoride allowing for hybrid
release more time to
clean up excess
Fluoride
release
OMFS and Pain Control
Indications for Extraction: caries, endo, perio, ortho (1st PMs), cracked teeth, impacted teeth,
supernumerary, pathology, questionable teeth should be extracted before radiation therapy
Contraindications for Extraction: brittle (unstable) diabetes, end-stage renal disease (ESRD),
unstable angina, leukemia, lymphoma, hemophilia or platelet disorder
- Head and neck radiation- hyperbaric oxygen before (and after) extraction
- IV bisphosphonates- try to RCT or restore
- Pericoronitis- treat infection first
Impacted Teeth: fail to erupt into arch within expected time
- Mandibular third molars > maxillary third molars, maxillary canines
- Primary reason is inadequate arch length
Nature of Overlying Tissue
- For any impacted teeth
- Soft tissue impaction: height of contour is above bone level and gingiva is completely or
partially covering tooth, easiest
- Hard tissue impaction
o Partial: height of contour is below bone level
o Full: tooth is entirely encased in bone, most difficult
Winter’s Classification
- For impacted 3rd molars
- Based on position of long axis of the 3rd molar in relation to the long axis of the 2nd molar
- For lower molars:
o Mesioangular -> easiest
o Distoangular -> most difficult
Pell and Gregory Classification
- For impacted lower third molars only
- Class A: same plane as other molars
- Class B: halfway down other molars
- Class C: below the cervical line of 2nd molar, most difficult
- Class I: crown anterior to ramus
- Class II: half crown within ramus
- Class III: entire crown within ramus; most difficult
Subperiosteal Abscess
- Possible whenever a mucoperiosteal flap is elevated for surgical extraction
- Irrigate thoroughly to remove fractured tooth or bone spicules below the soft tissue
Oro-antral Communication
- Most common with maxillary 1st molars
- Prevent with good pre-op radiograph and avoid excessive apical pressure
- Tx: if <2mm do nothing, 2-6mm 4As (antibiotics, antihistamines, analgesics, Afrin nasal
spray) and figure-8 suture, >6mm flap surgery
Alveolar Osteitis (Dry socket)
- When blood clot dislodges or dissolves before wound heals following extraction
- Doesn’t require antibiotics
- Tx: irrigation and local pain control (Eugenol medicated paste)
Nerve Injury
- Most common with lower 3rd molars & IAN
- Tx: Medrol dosepak
- Patients with numbness lasting more than 4 weeks should be referred for
microneurosurgical evaluation
Tooth Displacement
- Maxillary 1st/2nd molar -> maxillary sinus
- Maxillary 3rd molar -> infratemporal fossa
- Mandibular 3rd molar -> submandibular space
- Tooth lost into oropharynx, send to ER for chest and abdominal x-rays
Instruments:
- Bite block: better visualization
- Suction tips: Yankauer (soft tissue), Frazier (hard and soft tissue)
- Towel clip
- Tissue retractors
o Austin: right angle, for small flaps
o Minnesota: offset curved and broad, for cheek/flap
o Weider (Sweetheart): broad heart-shaped to protect and retract tongue for
mandibular lingual surgery
o Seldin: long and flat for elevating down to FOM as in mandibular tori removal
- Periosteal elevator
o Woodson: small and delicate
o #9 Molt: larger
- Dental elevators
o Straight (#301): most commonly used, lever, blade has concave surface towards the
tooth to be elevated
o Triangular (Cryer): second most commonly used, wheel & axle, left and right pairs,
removing a broken root left in socket
o Pick: remove retained or broken root, wedge, crane is heavy version, root tip is
delicate version
- Extraction forceps
o #150: universal uppers
§ A: Premolars
§ S: Primary
o #151: universal lowers
§ A: Premolars
§ S: Primary
o Cowhorn #23: lower molars, two sharp beaks to engage bifurcation
o Cowhorn #88R/L: upper molars; two beaks -> palatal root, one beak -> buccal
bifurcation
o Ash #74: mandibular premolars
o Upper root #65
- Blades
o #15: most common for intraoral surgery
o #11: stab incisions
o #10: large skin incisions
o #12: mucogingival surgery, curved shape enhances ease of access to the sulcus
- Irrigation: steady stream of sterile saline or water during bone removal, prevents heat
generation that can damage bone, increases efficiency of surgical bur
- Curettes: spoon-shaped end for scraping away soft tissue, always curette a socket once
you remove tooth
- Bone removers
o Rongeurs: double spring pliers, trim interradicular bone
o Osteotome (Bone Chisel): flat end tapped with surgical mallet
§ Monobevel -> remove torus
§ Bibevel -> section tooth
o Bone File: for final smoothing before suturing, removes bone with pull stroke
o Handpiece: do NOT use air-driven
§ Straight fissure burs -> section teeth
§ Round burs -> remove bone
- Hemostat: hemostatsis, blunt dissection for incision & drainage
- Needle holder: short stout beaks, crosshatched- allows for positive grasp of suture needle
- Suture
o Needle and thread
o Primary purpose is to immobilize a flap
o Suture should be placed from movable tissue to non-movable tissue
o Simple interrupted is the easiest and most common technique
o Silk has wicking property that allows bacteria to invade
- Forceps
o Adson Tissue Forceps: toothed -> periosteum, muscle, aponeurosis; non-toothed ->
fascia, mucosa, pathological tissue for biopsy
o Utility: used for picking up items from tray or preparing packing materials NOT for
handling soft tissues
- Scissors
o Dean: cutting sutures
o Mayo: for cutting fascia and dissecting soft tissue
Preparation for Extraction
- Remove the entire correct tooth
- Check tooth condition
- Check radiograph (Pano or PA)
- Informed consent
- Comfortable positioning
- Profound anesthesia
- Throat screen
Nitrous Oxide Sedation
- Minimum alveolar concentration (MAC): concentration required to render 50% of patient’s
immobile
- MAC of NO is 105%
- Protocol:
o Fill bad with oxygen and place hood on patient’s nose with flow rate of 4-6L/min
o Increase NO in 10% increments up to 30% for children, 50% for adults
o Nausea is most common complication
o Diffusion hypoxia: lungs fill with NO after stopping it, so always give patient’s 100%
oxygen for 3-5mins after
o Contraindications: <2yo, uncooperative, wheezing episode (mild to moderate
asthma is okay)
- Four Plateaus for Stage I Anesthesia
o Paresthesia: tingling
o Vasomotor: warm
o Drift: floating, target analgesia for NO sedation
o Dream: eyes closed, jaw sag
Extraction Type
- Simple: usually no incisions or sutures needed
- Surgical: surgical access via mucoperiosteal flap, surgical handpiece to remove bone or
section tooth, suture usually needed
Simple Extraction
- Sever Soft Tissue Attachment: loosen gingival fibers and PDL fibers attached to tooth with
periosteal elevator
- Luxate Tooth with Elevator: lever- fulcrum is alveolar bone, not the adjacent tooth; causes
expansion of bone and tearing of PDL
- Deliver Tooth with Forceps: slow and deliberate force
o Outward (B/L) -> initial movement for most permanent teeth
o Inward (L/P) -> initial movement for most primary teeth
o Rotary -> initial movement used in conical-rooted teeth
o Apical -> applied to every tooth
o Upper Incisors/Canines: luxate labial 1st then lingually, rotate & remove labially
o Upper 1st PMs: same as above but don’t rotate
o Upper molars: start buccal than lingual (favor buccal movement)
o Lower incisors/canines: less rotation than uppers
o Lower premolars: easiest to extract
o Lower molars: hardest to extract; same as uppers
- After Tooth is Removed: bend back the bone unless ortho or implant in future; curettage,
smooth bone, irrigate
Surgical Extraction
- Types of Mucoperiosteal flaps: always full thickness
o Envelope: 0 vertical releases; most often used
o Three-cornered: 1 vertical release
o Trapezoidal: 2 vertical releases
o Semilunar incision: apical to the MGJ, for apicoectomy; apically displaced flap is
impossible in maxillary palatal
o Double Y incision: incision down the midline, two vertical releases at each end
(double Y), for palatal torus removal
- Factors Predicting Difficult Extraction: divergent roots, root dilacerations, endo-treated
tooth, root resorption, long roots, dense bone, root fracture, proximity to sinus/IAN, limited
opening, bruxism (stronger PDL), exostoses or tori, gross caries, severe crowding
- Handpiece Uses: remove buccal bone (ditch or trough), remove interradicular bone, section
tooth by amount of roots
- Removal of root tip: gouge into adjacent bone with root tip pick, remove facial bone and
elevate facially, make a bone window at the apex and push the root out
Relative Contraindications for Implants: uncontrolled diabetes, immunocompromised patients,
volume and height of bone, bisphosphonate therapy, bruxism, smoking, hx of head/neck radiation,
cleft palate, adolescents; old age is not a contraindication
Implant Type & Components
- Subperiosteal, Transosteal, Endosteal
- Implant body (implant, fixture)
o Axisymmetric: symmetric around long axis of fixture
o Sequentially enlarge the osteotomy (reduce heat generated, helps to maintain
axis with freehand surgery)
o Inserted into tapped holes
- Abutment & Abutment Screw
o One-piece: abutment screw is actually a part of the abutment, no anti-rotation
component
o Two-Piece: abutment screw and abutment are separate components; has anti-
rotation component
- Implant crown
o Screw-retained: screw through crown abutment into implant with screw access
hole; better for restricted restorative space (Two-piece)
§ Retrievability
o Cement-retained: abutment is attached separately to implant; cement may be
trapped subgingivally and cause periimplantitis (One-piece or Two-piece)
§ Angle correction, more economical, easier for small teeth, more chair time
- One versus Two-Piece Implants
o One-piece: implant and abutment are attached together, drilled into bone as one
unit; cannot correct angle between the two components
o Two-piece: implant and abutment are separate components; implants drilled into
bone, then abutment attached next
Anti-rotation Component of Implants
- Prevents rotation and provides stabilization of abutment
- Internal Hex: abutment locks into implant body
- External Hex: implant body locks into abutment
Integration
- Osseointegration: direct histologic contact between bone and implant surface -> titanium
oxide layer
- Fibrousintegration: presence of fibrous tissue layer between implant and bone; failure of
osseointegration
Stability
- Primary: when you first place implant how well screw pattern holds
- Secondary: osseointegration, long-term healing of bone to the titanium alloy
Bone Quality
- Implant success rate goes from high to low
- Type I: anterior mandible, dense cortical bone
- Type II: posterior mandible
- Type III: anterior maxilla
- Type IV: posterior maxilla, soft medullary bone
Implant Placement
- 1mm -> buccal plate, lingual plate, inferior border of mandible, maxillary sinus, nasal
cavity
- 1.5mm -> adjacent natural teeth
- 2mm -> IAN
- 3mm -> adjacent implant
- 5mm -> mental nerve (due to anterior loop)
One versus Two-Stage Surgery
- One stage: place the implant AND healing abutment in one visit -> remove healing
abutment and restore at next visit
- Two stage: place the implant with cover screw and cover it up with gums -> open gums
and place abutments at next visit; Indications: poor primary stability, placing graft, less
infection rate for medically compromised pts
Impression
- Once healing is complete, final impression is made so the crown and abutment are properly
oriented
- Impression coping: used to transfer location and angulation of implant to a master cast
o Open tray: hole in the tray
o Closed tray: no hole in the tray
- Analog: implant replica embedded in master cast
Socket Preservation
- Maintains height and width of alveolar ridge after extraction
- Need to have an atraumatic extraction
- Irrigate extraction site thoroughly, remove granulation tissue, place bone graft material,
cover with resorbable collagen membrane
- Primary closure is unnecessary
Biologic Width for Implants
- Roughened surface for bone, smooth surface for soft tissue
- Gingival fibers orient next to implant parallel with cuff
Surgical Stent
- Location, angulation, depth; make sure any and all implants being placed are aligned
properly
Implant Success & Failure
- Success: immobile, no peri-implant RL, peri-implant bone loss <0.2mm per year after 1st
year, absence of symptoms like pain
- Failure: gram (-) anaerobic rods and filaments, 47C for 1min or 40C for 7mins is enough to
compromise osseointegration
Mandibular Fractures
- Best evaluated with a panoramic
- Condylar > Angle > Symphysis
o Angle: ipsilateral break from impact of blow
o Condylar: contralateral break from impact of blow
- Greenstick: not all the way through
- Comminuted: crushed into multiple fragments
- Simple: closed to oral cavity
- Compound: open to oral cavity, bone exposed through mucosa near teeth
Midface Fractures
- Best evaluated with a CBCT
- Le Fort I: horizontal across maxilla
- Le Fort II: pyramidal
- Le Fort III: complete craniofacial disjunction
- Zygomaticomaxillary complex fracture (Tripod fracture): caused by direct blow to the malar
eminence of zygomatic bone (lateral orbit, zygoma, maxilla), involves bleeding under
conjunctiva of the eye
Trauma Surgery
- Reduction: fracture fragments are returned to their normal position
- Open reduction: fracture fragments are exposed surgically by dissecting tissues
- Closed reduction: fracture fragments are manipulated without surgical exposure
- Internal fixation: using titanium bone plates to hold bone together
- Intermaxillary fixation (IMF): wiring jaws closed, archbars, elastics
- Mandible fractures are ideally treated with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF)
Skeletal Discrepancies
- Retrognathic mandible: Class II
- Prognathic mandible: Class III
- Apertognathic: anterior open bite
- Vertical maxillary excess: maxilla too long, gummy smile
- Horizontal transverse discrepancy: posterior crossbite
- Macrogenia: chin too big
- Microgenia: chin too small
Orthognathic Surgery
- To correct severe skeletal discrepancies
- Lateral cephs are main images used in tx planning these cases
- Acrylic splint used intraoperatively
- Le Fort I osteotomy-> move maxilla
- Bilateral sagittal split osteotomy (BSSO) -> move mandible
o Most common post-op complication is nerve damage
o Condyle position should be unaltered
- Genioplasty -> move chin
Distraction Osteogenesis (DO)
- Bone deposition between two bone surfaces that are separated by gradual traction
- For bone lengthening, but not for adding width
- 1st Phase Osteotomy: bone is cut
- 2nd Phase Latency Period: appliance is mounted to bone on each side of cut but is not
activated for 1 week
- 3rd Phase Distraction Phase: appliance is used to gradually separate the two pieces allowing
new bone to fill in the gap
Biopsychosocial Model of Pain
- Axis I -> “bio,” nociceptive input from somatic tissue, acute pain
- Axis II -> “psychosocial,” influence of interaction between thalamus, cortex, and limbic
structures, chronic pain (4-6months)
- It is not just about the tooth (axis I), but also consider the person with the tooth (axis II)
Pain Pathway
- Transduction: pain information travels from PNS to CNS
- Transmission: pain information travels from CNS to thalamus and higher cortical centers
- Modulation: limitation of flow of pain information
- Perception: human experience of pain is the sum total of these physiologic processes and
the psychological factors of higher thought and emotion
Categories of Pain
- Somatic Pain: increased stimulus yields increased pain
o Musculoskeletal: TMJ, periodontal, muscles (myofascial)
o Visceral: salivary glands, pulpal
- Neuropathic Pain: pain independent of stimulus intensity; damage to pain pathways
o Trigeminal neuralgia (tic douloureux)
§ Postmenopausal woman (older than 50)
§ Affects CN V: V1, V2, V3
§ Trigger point sends electrical, sharp, shooting, and episodic pain
followed by refractory periods
§ Unilateral
§ Tx: Anticonvulsants, surgery
o Atypical Odontalgia: secondary to deafferentation (removal of part of the neural
pathway) as a result of endo therapy or extraction; phantom toothache
o Postherpetic Neuralgia (PHN): potential sequela of herpes zoster (VZV) infection;
burning, aching, or shock-like. Tx: anticonvulsants, antidepressants, or sympathetic
blocks
o Burning Mouth Syndrome (BMS): burning, pain, dryness, and maybe also altered
taste sensation; postmenopausal women associated with type II diabetes,
malnutrition, xerostomia
o Chronic Headache (neurovascular pain)
§ Migraine: unilateral, pulsating, nausea, vomiting, photophobia,
phonophobia
§ Tension: bilateral, non-pulsating, not aggravated by routine activity
§ Cluster: intense pain near one eye
§ Tx: triptans for migraine (selective serotonin receptor agonist)
o Trauma, stroke
- Psychogenic Pain: intrapsychic disturbance -> conversion reaction, psychotic delusion,
malingering
- Atypical pain: unknown cause/diagnosis pending
TMJ Anatomy:
- Condyle of mandibular bone
- Glenoid fossa & articular eminence of temporal bone
o Articulation between the condyle and the
glenoid fossa down the convex articular
eminence with articular disc in between
- Fibrous Articular disc: separates joint space
o Lower joint space -> rotation
§ During hinge movement from closed to
halfway open (<25mm)
o Upper joint space -> translation
§ Condyle slides down and forward along
the articular eminence during sliding
movement (>25mm)
§ Maximum opening (40-55mm), protrusive, lateral excursive movements
- Muscles: move the mandible
o Lateral pterygoid: open & protrusion by moving condyles
o Masseter: close & protrusion
o Temporalis: close & retrusion
o Medial pterygoid: close & excursion
- Ligaments: limit movement of the mandible
o Capsular: covers TMJ space
o Discal/collateral: attaches to the medial & lateral pulls of the condyle -> keeps disc
attached to condyle during movement
o Posterior: articular disc to the back of the condyle -> prevents anterior disc
displacement
o Lateral: wraps around condyle & attaches to disc -> prevents posterior disc
displacement
- Blood Supply (MADS): Maxillary, Ascending pharyngeal, Deep auricular, Superficial
temporal
- Innervated by CNV3
TMD
- Myofascial Pain Syndrome (MPS): chronic muscular pain disorder
o Most common cause of masticatory pain
o Trigger points in muscles of mastication
o Crepitus (clicking) in TMJ, limited opening or range of motion, pain at rest
o Diffuse pain in preauricular region
o Parafunctional habits and disc displacements can contribute
o Tx: PT, stress management, splint therapy, medications
- Disc Displacement/Internal Derangement
o With reduction: CLICK, condyle pops over anteriorly displaced disc and pops on
the way back to its fossa (ipsilateral movement of jaw)
o Without reduction: LOCK, condyle is stuck behind anteriorly displaced disc
resulting in limited range of motion and ipsilateral deviation on opening
- Opening Patterns
o Deflection: deflects toward side that is stuck at maximum opening
o Deviation: deviates toward on side then returns back to midline at maximum
opening
- Recurrent Dislocation
o Mandibular condyle translates anterior to the articular eminence and requires
mechanical manipulation to achieve reduction; tx: Botox injection of lateral
pterygoid or surgery if chronic
- Ankylosis: union between condyle and skull can either be bony or fibrous
o Causes: trauma is the most common cause, surgery, radiation therapy, and infection
o Severely restricted range of motion
- Bruxism: clenching and/or grinding teeth diurnal and/or nocturnal usually caused or
exacerbated by stress; tx: occlusal guard (distribute occlusal forces more evenly and relax
musculature)
- Nonsurgical therapy (conservative -> aggressive)
o Counseling: address parafunctional habits like grinding, nail biting, stress
o Medical therapy: NSAIDs, steroids, analgesics, antidepressants, muscle relaxants
o PT: transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, massage, thermal tx, exercise
o Occlusion: splint therapy to reduce intraarticular pressure
o Arthrocentesis: two needles to flush out superior joint space
- Surgical therapy (conservative -> aggressive): nerve most damage in TMJ surgery ->
facial nerve (CN7)- temporal branch
o Arthroscopy: two cannulas, instrumentation within superior joint space
o Arthroplasty: disc repositioning surgery, for painful persistent clicking or closed
lock
o Discectomy: disc repair or removal when it is severely damaged
o Condylotomy: vertical ramus osteotomy and NOT fixated in order to allow soft
tissues to reposition condyle and disc into a better position
o Total joint replacement: for severely pathologic joints line in osteoarthritis or
rheumatoid arthritis
Biopsy: indicated after 2 weeks
- Types
o Cytology: repeatedly scrape with kit brush or tongue depressors -> cells smeared
on glass slide and immediately fixed
§ Monitoring large tissue area for dysplastic changes
§ Many false positives
o Aspiration: use of needle and syringe to suck up contents
§ For presence of fluid, ascertaining type of fluid, or exploration of
intraosseous lesion
§ RL lesion in bone that distinguishes between benign & malignant lesions
§ Fluid is expelled onto a slide and fixed
o Incisional: large >1cm lesion, suspicious of malignancy; deep, narrow wedge
containing lesion and normal tissue
o Excisional: small <1cm lesion, suspicious of benign lesion; 2-3mm margin of
uninvolved normal tissue with elliptical incision
- Techniques
o Block anesthesia is preferred because local infiltration can distort the architecture
of the lesion
o Direct handling will crush cells
o Sample in 10% formalin
- Clinical Examples
o Large white patch on buccal mucosa that wipes off with gauze presumed to be
candidiasis? Cytology
o Firm rough 2x3cm white lesion on lateral tongue that does not wipe off with gauze?
Incisional
o Denture wearer presents with red swelling in buccal vestibule? Adjust denture and
bring back in 2 weeks
Surgical Management of Cysts and Tumors
- Enucleation: cyst & tumor; surgical removal of a mass without cutting into or rupturing it
- Curettage: cyst & tumor
- Marsupialization: only cyst; cut a slit into an abscess or cyst and suture the edges of the slit
to keep it open so it can drain freely (i.e. Incision and drainage)
- Resection: only tumor; surgical removal of cyst or tumor and normal tissue around it
Medical Emergencies
- “SPORT:” stop treatment, position patient, oxygen*, reassure, take vitals
- Syncope (Fainting): change in temp, decreased BP/HR, LOC
o Most common medical emergency in dental chair
o Vasovagal syncope: most common syncope, needle anxiety
o Trendelenburg
o Left lateral decubitus if pregnant to relieve inferior vena cava
o Orthostatic hypotension: 2nd most common cause of syncope; dizzy spell or head
rush; BP pressure suddenly falls when standing up
- Epinephrine Overdose: rapid, intravascular injections; BP & HR rise, thumping heart
- Angina: sable versus unstable (chest pain at rest)
o Ischemia without necrosis (not enough blood to heart)
o “ONA:” oxygen, nitroglycerin (NTG), aspirin
o NTG (0.4mg) -> 5mins -> NTG -> 5mins -> NTG, aspirin and call 911
- Myocardial Infarction (MI): sudden occlusion of major coronary vessel usually left anterior
descending artery (LAD)
o Ischemia with necrosis
o “MONA:” morphine, oxygen, NTG, aspirin
- Hypoglycemia/Diabetes
o Conscious -> glucose tab or orange juice
o Unconscious -> IV dextrose or IM glucagon
o Conscious IV sedation for diabetic pt: still have low calorie meal with decrease
insulin dose
o Symptoms of Hypoglycemia: sweating, pallor, irritability, hunger, sleepiness, lack of
coordination, mydriasis
o Symptoms of Hyperglycemia: dry mouth, increased thirst, weakness, headache,
blurred vision, frequent urination
- Hyperventilation: don’t give oxygen*, sit upright, brown paper bag; increase BP and
carpopedal spasms
- Asthma: constriction and inflammation of bronchioles
o Wheezing: high pitch on exhale
o 2 puffs from emergency inhaler—Albuterol
o Avoid NSAIDs and narcotics
- Airway Obstruction: hands around neck
o Clear the pharynx of any food, vomit, or foreign objects
o Check for breathing (rise and fall of chest, sound of mouth or nose)
o Chin tilt upwards to extend the neck
o Protrude tongue and mandible to open airway
- Seizures/Convulsions
o Protect from injury, don’t restrain, IV or IM Benzo
o Most common seizure -> Grand mal seizure
o Grand mal (tonic-clonic)-> Dilantin(Phenytoin)
o Status epilepticus -> Valium(Diazepam)
- Stroke
o Transient ischemic accident (TIA): mini-stroke
o Cerebrovascular accident (CVA): stroke
o Oxygen and call 911
o Caused by hyponatremia (low sodium in the blood)
o Look for facial droop, arm drift, speech slur
- Anaphylactic Shock
o “AEIOU:” Albuterol, Epinephrine pen (0.3mg 1:1000), IM anti-histamine, oxygen,
you call 911
- Anticoagulation
o Check blood tests below:
§ CBC-> anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia
§ Bleeding Time -> platelet function, Aspirin
§ PT (extrinsic) -> anticoagulants, liver damage, Vit K
§ INR (standardized PT exam)-> Warfarin (Coumadin) 2-3 (normal INR=1)
§ PTT (intrinsic) -> Heparin, renal dialysis, hemophilia
o Herbal anticoagulants: garlic, ginger, ginkgo, ginseng, saw palmetto
Periodontics
Periodontium: alveolar bone, PDL, cementum, gingiva
- Free gingiva & attached gingiva: keratinized
- Alveolar mucosa: non-keratinized
Pathogenesis
- Microbial challenge (LPS, antigens) presented by
subgingival plaque bacteria
- Upregulated host immune-inflammatory response
(cytokines, prostaglandins, MMPs)
- Tissue destruction
Periodontal Exam & Classifications
- Probing pocket depth (PPD): from gingival margin to base of pocket
- Clinical attachment loss (CAL): from CEJ to base of pocket
o CAL= PPD + recession
- Bleeding on probing (BOP): best measure of inflammation in periodontal tissues
- Gingival recession: CEJ to gingival margin; determines likelihood of regaining root coverage,
Miller Classification
o Class I: marginal tissue recession not extending to the MGJ, no bone or tissue loss
o Class II: marginal tissue recession extends to or beyond MGJ, no bone or tissue loss
o Class III: marginal tissue recession extends to or beyond MGJ, bone or tissue loss or
tooth mal-positioning prevents total root coverage
o Class IV: marginal tissue recession extends to or beyond MGJ, bone or tissue loss or
tooth mal-positioning severe that total root coverage not possible
- Alveolar bone loss: radiographic measure with vertical BWs, not reliable
o Normal distance from CEJ to alveolar crest is 2mm
o Crest should be parallel to line connecting CEJs of adjacent teeth
o Horizontal: stays parallel
o Vertical/angular: classified by # of bony walls remaining-infrabony defects
§ 1 wall: hemi-septal
§ 2 wall: crater (most common)
§ 3 wall: trough
§ 4 wall: circumferential (extraction socket)
- Suppuration: indicates large number of neutrophils in pocket
- Mobility: due to loss of perio support, traumatic occlusion, or combo; Miller Classification
o Class 0: normal
o Class 1: slightly more than normal
o Class 2: <1mm
o Class 3: >1mm & vertically depressed in socket
- Furcation: bone loss at branching point of multi-rooted tooth (short root trunk, short roots,
narrow interradicular dimension, cervical enamel projection); Hamp & Glickman
Classification
Hamp Classification Glickman Classification
Class 0 Class 1: Incipient
Class 1: <3mm Class 2: Cul-de-sac
Class 2: >3mm Class 3: through-and-through
Class 3: through-and-through Class 4: visible through-and through
- Fenestration: isolated area in which root is denuded of bone and root surface is covered by
gingiva and periosteum, where marginal bone is intact
- Dehiscence: when the denuded bone areas extend through the marginal bone
Oral Exam: measured by home care (plaque/calculus), inflammation (redness, swelling, BOP),
destruction of perio tissues (perio exam)
Healthy Gingiva Features
Features Children Adults
Color Reddish due to thinner epithelium, less keratinization, and Coral pink
greater vascularity
Contour Rounded and rolled margins due to edema that Knife-edge margins
accompanies eruption and prominent cervical ridges
Consistency Flabby due to less dense CT and lack of organized collagen Firm and resilient
Texture Lack of stippling due to shorter and flatter papilla Stippling present
Sulcus Deeper because soft tissue more easily splits up from tooth Less deep
Gingivitis: inflammation, no PDL or bone destruction measured by color, contour, consistency
(fibrosis overtime)
- Plaque-induced gingival disease
o Most common
o Plaque + Inflammatory cells of host -> Gingivitis
o Modified by systemic factors, medications, malnutrition: endocrine changes
(puberty, pregnancy, diabetes), blood dyscrasias (leukemia), drug induced
gingival enlargements with calcium-channel blockers, Dilantin, Cyclosporine,
oral contraceptives, Vitamin C deficiency (scurvy)
- Non-plaque-induced gingivitis
o In response to infections, allergy, trauma: bacterial (gonorrhea, syphilis), viral
(herpes), fungal (candidiasis), foods, restorative materials, toothpastes (sodium lauryl
sulfate), factitious (unintentional), iatrogenic (doctor), accidental
o Hereditary gingival fibromatosis: non-hemorrhagic and firm
o Reduced Attached Gingiva (RAG): in children, most common cause of inadequate
attached gingiva is labial eruption path; tx: Ortho, FGG or CT graft
Periodontitis: inflammation, PDL or bone destruction (CAL); most prevalent in males of African
descent; Chronic>LAP>GAP>Refractory
- Prepubertal Periodontitis: involves primary molars mostly in AA
- Necrotizing periodontal diseases (ANUG, ANUP): occurs in children and adults;
pseudomembranous, painful, fetid breath, blunted papillae, fever, predisposing factors are
stress, smoking, and immunosuppression
o Tx: debride & Chlorhexidine & antibiotics (for fever)
- Periodontitis
- Periodontitis as a Manifestation of Systemic Disease & Acquired Conditions
o Systemic disease or conditions affecting periodontal supporting tissues
o Mucogingival deformities and conditions
o Traumatic occlusal force
o Tooth- and prosthesis-related factors
- Periodontal abscesses and Endo-Perio lesions
- Peri-implant disease and conditions
o Peri-implant health: pseudomonas, staphylococcus
o Peri-implant mucositis: gingivitis of implants
o Peri-implantitis: periodontitis of implants
o Peri-implant soft and hard tissue deficiencies
Steps to Staging and Grading a Periodontal Case
Step 1: Initial Case Screen:
Overview to Access - Full mouth probing depths
Diseases - FMX
- Missing teeth
Mild to mod periodontitis will typically stage I or II
Severe to very severe periodontitis will typically be either stage III or IV
Step 2: Establish Stage I or II (Mild to Moderate Periodontitis):
Stage - Confirm CAL
- Rule out non-periodontitis cause of CAL (i.e. root fractures, NCCL,
trauma)
- Determine max CAL or RBL
- Confirm RBL patterns
Stage III or IV (Moderate to Severe Periodontitis):
- Determine max CAL or RBL
- Confirm RBL patterns
- Assess tooth loss due to periodontitis
- Evaluate case complexity factors (i.e. severe CAL frequency,
surgical challenges)
Step 3: Establish - Calculate RBL (% of root length x 100) divided by age
Grade - Assess risk factors (i.e. smoking, diabetes)
- Measure response to SRP and plaque control
- Assess expected rate of bone loss
- Conduct detailed risk assessment
- Account for medical and systemic inflammatory considerations
Step 4: Treatment Stage I or II, Grade A or B: Standard non-surgical periodontal therapy
Plan Stage III or IV- complex and/or multidisciplinary therapy
Periodontal Staging: intends to classify the severity and extent of a patient’s disease based on the
measurable amount of destroyed and/or damaged tissue as a result of periodontitis and to access
the specific factors that may attribute to the complexity of long-term care management
- Initial stage determined by CAL. If CAL not available, RBL. Tooth loss due to periodontitis
may modify stage definition. One or more complexity factors may shift the stage to a higher
level
Staging
Periodontitis Stage I Stage II Stage III Stage IV
Interdental 1-2mm 3-4mm >5mm >5mm
CAL
Coronal Coronal Extending to middle third of root or
Severity
RBL third third (15- beyond
(15%) 33%)
Tooth loss No tooth loss < 4 teeth >5 teeth
Max PDD Max PDD Stage II plus: Stage III plus need for
<4mm <5mm PDD >6mm rehab due to:
Mostly Mostly Vertical BL masticatory
Horizontal Horizontal >3mm dysfunction, 2nd
bone loss bone loss Furca II or III occlusal trauma
Complexity Local Moderate (mobility >2), severe
ridge defects ridge defects, bite
collapse, drifting,
flaring, <20 teeth
remaining (10
opposing pairs)
For each stage, describe extent as:
Extent and Add to stage - Localized (<30%)
distribution as descriptor - Generalized (>30%)
- Molar/incisor pattern
Periodontal Grading: aims to indicate the rate of periodontitis progression, responsiveness to
standard therapy, and potential impact on systemic health
- Always assume grade B and seek evidence to shift to A or C
Grading
Progression Grade A: Slow Grade B: Mod Grade C: Rapid
Direct No loss over 5 <2mm over 5 >2mm over 5
evidence of RBL or CAL years years years
progression
% bone <0.25 0.25-1 >1
loss/age
Heavy biofilm Destruction Destruction
deposits with commensurate exceeds
Primary low levels of with biofilm expectations
criteria Indirect destruction deposits given biofilm
evidence of deposits; specific
Case
progression clinical patterns
phenotype
suggestive of
periods of rapid
progression
and/or early
onset disease
Grade Smoking Non-smoker <10 cigs/day >10 cigs/day
Risk factors
modifiers Diabetes Normoglycemic HbA1c <7% HbA1c >7%
Plaque
- Microbial plaque considered initiating factor of disease (both caries and periodontal)
- in health, bacterial composition is from gram(+) cocci and rods from Streptococcus and
Actinomyces
- Hypotheses
o Non-specific: more plaque means more disease no matter what bacterial species
o Specific: only specific bugs cause disease
o Ecological: mouth is an ecosystem just like a rainforest, so certain bacteria and host
factors (smoking, diabetes) change the environment to favor pathogenic bacteria
- SupraG: aerobic
o Tooth: gram(+); outer surface of plaque: gram(-)
- SubG: anaerobic
o Tooth: gram(+) coronal, gram (-) apical; epithelium: gram(-)
- Composition
o Organic: polysaccharides, proteins, glycoproteins, lipids
o Inorganic: calcium, phosphorous, sodium, potassium fluoride
o SupraG derive from saliva, subG derive from GCF
- Formation
o Pellicle Formation: within secs consists of glycoproteins, proline-rich proteins, and
other molecules that serve as attachment sites for bacteria
o Adhesion & Attachment of Bacteria: within minutes; initial adhesion is due to weak
irreversible van der Waals and electrostatic forces -> firm attachment is due to
strong irreversible interactions between specific bacterial adhesin molecules and
host pellicle receptors
o Colonization & Plaque Maturation: within 24-48 hours; firmly attached primary
colonizers provide new receptors for attachment of other bacteria in a process
called coadhesion; as bacteria grow and the biofilm matures, there is a shift from
facultative gram(+) to anaerobic gram(-)
§ Primary Colonizers: Streptococcus
§ Secondary Colonizers
§ Fusobacterium nucleatum: non-motile, gram (-) rod, induces apoptosis of
leukocytes and release of tissue-damaging substances from leukocytes;
bridge that attaches to both primary and secondary colonizers
- Biofilm
o Fluid channels run through the plaque mass permitting the passage of nutrients
o Quorum sensing: communication among bacteria in biofilm to encourage growth of
beneficial species and discourage growth of competing species
o Biofilm bacteria is more resistant to antimicrobials than planktonic or free-
swimming bacteria
- Microbial Complexes
o Red complex: associated with BOP and deep PDD; P. gingivalis, T. denticola, T.
forsythia
o Orange complex: precedes presence of red complex supporting sequential nature
of plaque maturation; Fusobacterium, Prevotella intermedia, Campylobacter rectus
- A.actinomycetemcomitans: causes aggressive periodontitis (old classification), non-motile,
gram(-) rod, capnophilic, leukotoxin, lipopolysaccharide, collagenase, protease that cleaves
IgG
- P. gingivalis: chronic periodontitis (old classification), non-motile, gram(-), fimbriae,
capsule, gingipain, collagenase, hemolysin
- T. denticola: ANUG/ANUP, motile, gram(-) spirochete, penetrates epithelium and CT,
protease that can degrade collagen, immunoglobulins, and complement factors
- T. forsythia: non-motile, gram(-) rod, protease that cleaves immunoglobulins and
complement factors
- P. intermedia: pregnancy gingivitis, non-motile, gram(-) rod, become darkly pigmented
when grown on blood agar plates
- S. salivarius: most common oral bacteria, residues on tongue
Local Factors: in relation to leading to periodontal disease
- Calculus: lingual surfaces of mand anterior teeth and buccal surfaces of max molars
o Mineralized dental plaque—precipitation of mineral salts into plaque usually occurs
within 1-14 days
o Calculus does not by itself serve as a mechanical irritant to gingival tissues but is
always covered with a layer of bacterial plaque which serves as the primary
irritant
o SupraG: white/yellow, mineralization via saliva, occurs near salivary duct openings
o SubG: dark, mineralization via GCF
- Materia Alba: soft white cheese-like unorganized accumulation of bacteria, salivary
proteins, desquamated epithelial cells, and occasional food debris; easily displaced with
water spray
- Extrinsic Stains: don’t contribute to gingival inflammation and are primarily an esthetic
concern
o Orange: anterior teeth, poor OH
o Brown: drinking dark-colored beverages, poor OH
o Dark brown and back: tobacco
o Yellow-brown: CHX and stannous fluoride
o Black: thin lines on cervical third found in healthy mouth, consumption of iron
o Green and yellow: anterior teeth, poor OH and chromogenic bacteria
o Bluish-green: occupational exposure of metallic dust
- Malocclusion: prominent roots and teeth associated with high frena often experience
gingival recession; crowding, mesial drift or extrusion can lead to food impaction and
plaque retention
- Faulty Restorations: overhangs, open margins, rough surfaces, open contacts; over-
contoured restorations are worse for gingival health than under-contoured
- SubG margins
- Appliances: RPDs, ortho therapy, oral jewelry
- Self-inflicted injury: aggressive horizontal brushing, toothpicks, fingernail biting
Pathogenesis
- Neutrophils (PMNs): 1st line defense
o Most important cells involved in controlling the bacterial challenge and destroying
periodontal tissue via release of destructive molecules
o Migrate via chemotaxis from blood vessels to pocket
o Kill via phagocytosis with myeloperoxidase and oxygen radicals
o MMP-8 (neutrophil collagenase): most important proteinase involved in destruction
of periodontal tissue
o Defective neutrophil chemotaxis leads to aggressive periodontitis (Neutropenia,
Chediak-Higashi syndrome, Papillon-Lefevre syndrome, LAD-1/2)
- Macrophages: antigen-presenting cells like monocytes and dendritic cells; regulate immune
response via cytokine release like IL-8
- Mast cells: vascular permeability and dilation; IgE
- Lymphocytes:
o B cells become plasma cells and make antibodies
o T helper cells (CD4) help in communication
o T cytotoxic cells (CD8) kill intracellular antigens
o NK cells are T cells that recognize and kill tumor and virally-infected cells
- Proinflammatory cells: “body destructs itself to help itself”
o IL-1: bone resorption
o IL-6
o PGE2
o TNFa: macrophage activation
o MMPs: collagen destruction (Protein-ase -> eats proteins)
- Anti-inflammatory mediators: IL-4, IL-10, TIMPs
- Gingivitis
o Stage 1: 2-4 days, neutrophils (PMNs), increased GCF
o Stage 2: 4-7 days, T lymphocyte, increased collagen loss, BOP
o Stage 3: 14-21 days, B lymphocyte (plasma cells), collagen loss, clinical changes in
color, contour, consistency
o Stage 4: transition to irreversible damage of periodontitis
Treatment Planning
- Short-term goals: reduce gingival inflammation by correcting conditions causing it
- Long-term goals: eliminate pain, arrest CAL, establish occlusal stability and function, reduce
tooth loss, prevent disease recurrence
- Preliminary Phase (0): treat emergencies, extract hopeless teeth
- Non-surgical Phase (I): plaque control and patient education
- Periodontal re-evaluation: 4-8 weeks after to allow formation of JE (epithelium contacts
enamel directly via hemidesmosomes)
- Surgical Phase (II): reduce or eliminate periodontal pockets, correct defects, regenerate
tissue, implants, endo tx
- Restorative Phase (III)
- Maintenance Phase (IV): maintenance performed in a continuum with phase II and III
therapy every 3mos for the first year
- Risk Elements
o Risk factor: casually associated with the disease (i.e. smoking, diabetes, plaque)
o Risk determinant: unchangeable background characteristics, increase likelihood of
disease (gender, genetics, age, socioeconomic status)
o Risk indicator: not casually associated with the disease (i.e. stress, osteoporosis,
HIV/AIDS)
o Risk marker or predictor: quantitative association with disease (previous history,
BOP, CAL)
Prognosis: CAL is the most important factor in determining the prognosis!
Bone Level Clinical Local Factors Systemic Patient
Factors Factors Cooperation
Excellent - - Health - Good
Good Adequate - Maintain - Good
Fair Inadequate Mobility, Maintain Limited Adequate
furcation I
Poor Moderate Mobility, Difficult to Yes Questionable
furcation I/II maintain
Questionable Advanced Mobility, Inaccessible Yes Inadequate
furcation areas
II/III
Hopeless Advanced Extract Unable Uncontrolled Inadequate
Non-surgical therapy
- Scaling Root Planing
o Scaling: removal of both supraG and subG plaque and calculus
o Root planing: removal of embedded calculus and rough cementum
- Ultrasonic scalers: 20,000-45,000 cycles/sec to remove tenacious calculus; lavage,
cavitation, vibration, acoustic turbulence
o Magnetostrictive: Cavitron; elliptical pattern
o Piezoelectric: linear pattern
o Contraindications: pacemakers, aerosol diseases, implants
- Strokes:
o Exploratory: light; probes and explorers
o Scaling: short, strong pull
o Root planning: light to mod pull stroke
o Ultrasonic: light intermittent stroke with tip
parallel to the tooth surface and in constant motion
o Insertion: 0 degrees (closed-angle) -> scaling and
root planing: 45-90 degrees (open-angle) with
lower apical third of curette at the line angle
- Prophy with Gritty Paste
o Cup: extrinsic stain removal and pocket access
o Brush: occlusal grooves and interproximal areas
o Jet: slurry water and sodium bicarbonate to remove stains and soft deposits
General Concepts of Surgery
- Wider base to ensure adequate blood supply
- Incisions over intact bone, not over bony defects or eminences
- Rounded corners
- Vertical releases at line angles
- Avoid vital structures
- Post op plaque control is most important procedure after surgery
Flap Thickness
- Split or partial thickness (mucosal) flap: gingiva/ mucosa and submucosa
o Indicated for gingival graft, periosteal sutures, prominent fenestration or dehiscence
- Full thickness (mucoperiosteal) flap- includes periosteum; expect ~1mm of thin
periradicular bone resorption and remodeling
o Completed with 3 horizontal incisions
§ Internal or reverse bevel incision-
• 0.5-1mm from the gingival margin (Apically Displaced Flap)
• 1-2mm from the free gingival margin (Modified Widman Flap)
• Coronal to the base of the pocket (Undisplaced Flap)
§ Sulcular or crevicular incision- base of pocket to alveolar crest
§ Interdental or interproximal incision- removes collar of tissue around the
tooth created by first 2 incisions
o Modified Widman Flap: includes incisions of full thickness flap but not reflected
beyond MGJ—access subG for debridement with new attachment
o Apically repositioned flap: full thickness flap that requires additional vertical
releasing incisions made beyond MGJ in order to attain pocket reduction
Periodontal Pack: ZOE for 1 week; doesn’t enhance healing but protects surgical sight
Papilla Preservation
- Conventional Flap= split the papilla
- Papilla preservation flap: cuts made at these line angles
o Lingual to facial line angle
o Lingual to lingual line angle
o Facial to facial line angle
Gingival Surgery—secondary healing
- Gingivectomy: excision of gingiva to eliminate pockets or enlargements via external bevel
incision (perpendicular to long axis of tooth)
- Gingivoplasty: excision of gingiva to reshape
- Distal Wedge: pocket reduction distal to terminal molars with a band of attached
keratinized gingiva required
o Max: full thickness flap with parallel incisions; tuberosity
o Mand: full thickness flap with V-shaped incisions; retromolar triangle area
Mucogingial Surgery—partial thickness flaps
- Free gingival graft: widen band of keratinized tissue; happens below or apical to gingival
margin
o Ideal thickness: 1-1.5mm
o Needs to undergo revascularization at the site of implantation
o Donor site most likely to suffer greater palatine nerve injury
- CT graft: root coverage; donor site is usually palate; happens above or coronal to gingival
margin
- Laterally Positioned Flap (Pedicle): edge remains attached to gum & is pulled over or down
to cover exposed root and sewn in place
- Frenectomy: complete removal of frenum; Labial > Buccal > Lingual
- Frenotomy: incision of frenum
- Vestibuloplasty: deepen the vestibule by apically repositioning the alveolar mucosa,
buccinator, mentalis, and mylohyoid muscles
Osseous Surgery
- General Considerations
o (+) architecture: interproximal bone is coronal to radicular bone
o Flat architecture: interproximal and radicular bone at the same height
o (-)/reverse architecture: interproximal bone is apical to radicular bone
- Ostectomy: removal of supporting alveolar bone—from bone contacting tooth
- Osteotomy: removal of non-supporting alveolar bone—away from tooth
Crown Lengthening: combing ostectomy with gingivectomy (need 2mm of keratinized tissue) or
apically repositioned flap (preserve keratinized tissue present)
Periodontal Regeneration
- GTR: regenerate bone, cementum and PDL
o Barrier membrane: prevents soft tissue down growth and permits hard tissue
ingrowth
o Bone graft: osteoconductive, osteoinductive, and/or osteogenic
o Biological agent: creates an environment conducive to tissue formation
Root Surface Treatment: chelating agents like EDTA and citric acid can expose the collagen fibrils
through demineralization and may improve new attachment
Bone Graft Materials:
- Autograft: self; osteoconductive, osteoinductive, osteogenic
- Allograft: other human undecalcified/decalcified freeze-dried bone with bone morphogenic
proteins (BMPs); osteoconductive, osteoinductive
- Xenografts: animal; osteoconductive
- Alloplast: synthetic or inorganic; osteoconductive
- Osteoconductive: scaffold
- Osteoinductive: convert neighboring progenitor cells into osteoblasts
- Osteogenic: make bone
KEY THINGS TO KNOW FOR BOARDS
- Additive: periodontal regeneration, FGG, CTG, coronally advanced flap
- Subtractive: resective osseous surgery, gingivectomy, apically positioned flap
- 1 and 2 wall defects- resection, recontour bone to restore (+) architecture
- 3 and 4 wall defects- regeneration, better blood supply and cell source proximity
- Deep narrow 3-wall is ideal for regenerating infrabony defects
- Hamp Class II (buccal upper or either buccal or lingual lower) is ideal for regenerating
furcation defects
- Miller Class I with thick gingival biotype and wide band of keratinized tissue is ideal for
regenerating recession defects
Healing After Surgery
- Regeneration: complete restore architecture and function
- Repair: not complete restore, involve healing by scar or formation of long JE
- Reattachment: reunion of epithelial and CT with root surface after incision or injury
- New attachment: embedding of new PDL fibers into new cementum that has been
previously deprived of its original attachment
Wound Healing
- Cells arrive fastest to slowest; epithelial cells -> CT cells -> PDL cells -> bone cells
- Primary Healing
- Secondary Healing
o Hemostasis and fibrin clot cover wound
o Cell proliferation of epithelium at wound margin
o Epithelium migrate across cut CT surface under fibrin clot—proliferation of vascular
tissue (0.5-1mm per day)
o Complete surface epithelization
o Epithelial growth proceeds until new JE attachment established
Adjunctive Therapies
- Antibiotics: aims to decrease the number of bacteria in pocket
o Only used as adjunct in debridement during non-surgical phase
o Aggressive and refractory periodontitis
o Tetracyclines: concentrate in GCF, doxycycline only requires one dose per day
o Amoxicillin (500mg TID) & Metronidazole (250mg TID) for 14 days= best combo!
§ Duration is more important than dose—the longer the better
§ Avoid alcohol with MTZ
o Amoxicillin + Clavulante potassium= Augmentin: resistant to penicillinases
o Local Antibiotics: localized recurrent and/or residual PPD >5mm with inflammation
are still present following conventional therapy
§ Arrestin=Minocycline
§ Atridox=Doxycycline
§ PerioChip=Chlorhexidine gluconate
- Host Modulation Therapy: aims to downregulate the destructive aspects of the host
response
o Only used as adjunct in debridement during non-surgical phase
o Chronic periodontitis
o NSAIDs, Bisphosphonates
o Subantimicrobial Dose Doxycycline (SDD): inhibits MMPs; 20mg twice daily for 3-
9mos Periostat both systemic and local
o Emdogain: enamel matrix proteins, local
o PDGF: GEM 21S
o These surgical adjuncts may also influence periodontal regeneration
- Occlusion Correction from traumatic occlusion
o Primary occlusal trauma: excessive forces on normal periodontium
o Secondary occlusal trauma: normal occlusal forces on reduced periodontium
o Fremitus: vibration of teeth upon closing
o Therapy: delayed until after inflammation is resolved; coronoplasty or bite guard
o Splinting: improve patient comfort and function by immobilizing excessively mobile
teeth
- Furcation Correction
o Furcation plasty/Odontoplasty: open furcation area and smooth it to allow access
o Tunneling: remove bone and move tissue apically to create Class IV to keep it clean
o Class I- Initial therapy, Odontoplasty, Barrel in crowns
o Class II- GTR, Odontoplasty, Root resection
o Class III & IV: root resection (DB root of max molars), hemisection (mand molars),
extraction
Maintenance:
- Toothbrushing- Bass method: sulcular brushing where bristles are placed at gingival
margin at a 45 degree angle to the tooth, the bristles extend about 0.5mm subG to
effectively disrupt plaque buildup in the cervical area; soft nylon bristle brushes replaced
every 3mos
- Flossing- C-shape
- Waterpik: home water irrigation systems are designed to flush out gross food debris and
reduce bacterial load on the gingiva, NOT biofilm on the tooth surface
- Parental participation in oral hygiene until age 8 due to manual dexterity
Prosthodontics
General considerations of Pros
- Crown-to-Root ratio: 1:2 ideal, 1:1 minimum
- Abutment: tooth to which bridge attaches; don’t used compromised endodontic or
periodontal teeth
o Divergent, multiple, curved, and broad roots preferred
- Retainer: crown that attaches to abutment
- Pontic: fake tooth
- Connector: connects retainer to pontic
- Poor Prognosis: single retainer cantilever, multiple-splinted abutment teeth, nonrigid
connectors, intermediate abutments (pier)
- Ante’s Law: PDL surface area of the abutment teeth should be equal to or greater than the
imaginary PDL surface area of missing teeth
- Splinting: distributes occlusal forces, recommended where the periodontal surface of an
abutment tooth is not sufficient to support the bridge
o When replacing a canine, central and lateral should be splinted together to
prevent lateral drifting of the bridge
Support, Stability, Retention in Removable
Definitions Maxillary Mandibular CD RPD Tooth
Resistance to Palate Buccal Shelf Base Rest Occlusal
Support vertical Alveolar Retromolar Altered Third
seating Ridge Pad Cast DE
Resistance to Ridge Ridge height Flange Major & Middle
horizontal height Depth of Minor Third
Stability dislodging Depth of vestibule Connector,
forces vestibule Reciprocal
Clasp Arm
Resistance to Alveolar Alveolar Peripheral Direct & Gingival
vertical Ridge Ridge Seal by Indirect Third
Retention dislodging Adhesion of Retainer,
forces Salvia Retentive
Clasp Arm
Occlusion
MMR: Maxillo-Mandibular Relations
- Centric Relation (CR): position in which condyles articulate with thinnest avascular portion
of their respective discs in the most anterior-superior position against articular eminence;
CD, multiple teeth being restored or replaced
o Achieved by Bimanual manipulation, deprogram with leaf gauge or acrylic resin jig
o For edentulous patient, provides the ability to increase or decrease the VDO more
accurately in the articulator by establishing a radius of the mandible’s arc of
closure
- Centric Occlusion (CO)/ Maximum Intercuspation (MICP): complete interdigitation of teeth;
single fixed procedure
- VDO: distance between nose and chin when biting together
- VDR: VDO + Interocclusal Rest Space; distance between nose and chin at rest; take
measurement when patient is sitting up
- Interocclusal Rest Space: ideally 2-4mm of space between upper and lower premolars
Compensating Curves
- Curve of Spee: anteroposterior curve to ensure loading into long axis of each tooth; more
mesial inclination as you move distally
- Curve of Wilson: mediolateral curve along posterior cusp tips to ensure loading into long
axis of each tooth; more lingual inclination as you move distally
Plane of Occlusion
- Camper’s line: imaginary line from ala of nose to tragus of ear
- Interpupillary line: imaginary line between pupils of the eyes
Facebow: maxillary arch to the skull and mandible to the rotational center of the TMJs;
transfers relationship between the hinge axis and maxilla from the patient to the articulator
- Arbitrary: orients maxilla to skull via external auditory meatus
- Kinematic: placed on hinge axis of mandible
Articulator
- Non-adjustable
- Semi-adjustable: Bennet Angle (15) and horizontal condylar inclination (HCI 30)
o Arcon: condyles are lower and fossa are upper
o Non-arcon: upper and lower membranes are rigidly attached
- Fully adjustable
Mounting Casts
- Alginate cast -> wax records
- Elastomeric materials -> elastomeric materials (PVS)
Disclusion
- Condylar Guidance: posterior determinant by slope of articulator eminence—HCI on
articulator
- Incisal Guidance: anterior determinant; incisal edges of mandibular incisors against L
slopes of maxillary incisors—pin and guide table on articulator
- Canine Guidance: contact occurs only on upper and lower canines on working side in
lateral movements
- Anterior Guidance: Incisal Guidance + Canine Guidance
- Protrusive: registers anterior-inferior condyle path in the translation movement of the
condyles; incisal and condylar guidance disclude posterior teeth
o Christensen’s phenomenon: refers to the distal space created between the
maxillary and mandibular occlusal surfaces when the mandible is protruded, due to
downward and forward movement of condyles down their articular eminences
- Lateral: canines on working side and condyle on balancing side disclude posterior teeth on
balancing side
o Balancing side: side jaw is moving away from
o Working side: side jaw is moving towards
Guide Table: made to preserve anterior guidance; mechanical can be used for all except restoring
maxillary anterior teeth because cannot reproduce lingual contours of maxillary anterior
teeth—need custom incisal guide made of acrylic resin
Mutual Protection: front teeth disclude posterior teeth during protrusive and lateral movement
while back teeth have flat occlusal surfaces and strong roots to help protect anterior teeth from bite
forces
Balanced Occlusion: simultaneous anterior and bilateral posterior contacts (tripodization) in
centric & eccentric movement; increasing condylar guidance, need to increase compensating curves
- Balancing Side: Max L cusps contact L incline of mand B cusps
- Working Side: Max L cusps contact B incline of mand L cusps AND mand B cusps contact L
incline of max B cusps
Lingualized Occlusion: only the palatal cusps of the maxillary posterior teeth contact the
mandibular posterior teeth
Bennett
- Bennett Angle: angle obtained after nonworking side condyle has moved anteriorly and
medially relative to the sagittal plane
- Bennett Shift: lateral movement of mandible toward the working side during lateral
excursions
- Bennett Movement: lateral movement of both condyles toward the working side, basically
“TMJ looseness”
Occlusal Determinants Favoring Disclusion (Opposite for Eccentric Occlusion)
Horizontal: Steep Incisal Guidance
Anterior Guidance
Lateral: Steep Canine Guidance
Horizontal: Steep Horizontal Condylar Inclination
Posterior Guidance
Lateral: Less Bennet Movement
Cuspal Anatomy Short with shallow inclines
Tooth Arrangement Less Curve of Spee & Curve of Wilson
Orientation of Occlusal Plane Less parallel to orientation of condylar path
Static Occlusion
Functional/Holding/Supporting Cusps: lingual
uppers, buccal lowers
Non-function/non-holding/non-supporting: buccal
uppers, lingual lowers
Centric Stops: where functioning cusps are
contacting opposing teeth
Ideal: mandible offset by ½ to mesial
Dynamic Occlusion
Working Contacts: contact made in working movement
Non-working contacts: contact made in NW movement
Centric Stop Facial Range: B cusps of lowers contacting in
central fossa/marginal ridges in uppers
Centric Stop Lingual Range: L cusps of uppers contacting in
central fossa/marginal ridges in lowers
Right Side of Mouth
Working movement: side matches movement
Protrusive movement
Non-working movement: side doesn’t match movement
ID Cusps Asking
1. ID color on other arch
2. Determine movement
3. Do movement accordingly
Working Interferences: 1st contact on tooth on the
working side
Non-working interferences: any tooth on opposite side
makes 1st contact
Complete Dentures
Maxillary Edentulous Anatomy
- Alveolar Ridge
- Labial & Buccal Frenum: restrict or secure mobile tissue
- Labial Vestibule: space between lips and ridge; from buccal frenum to buccal frenum
- Buccal Vestibule: space between cheeks and ridge; posterior to buccal frenums
- Hamular Notch: posterior boundary marker; junction of maxilla with sphenoid bone distal
to alveolar ridge
- Vibrating Line: from hamular notch to hamular notch; 2mm away from Fovea palatini
- “Butterfly Line:” junction between soft and hard palate; vibrating line is posterior to this
- Posterior Palatal Seal: in between “butterfly line” and vibrating line; compensates for
polymerization and shrinkage of processing
- Coronoid Notch: DB area of impression/denture to avoid interference from coronoid
process in mandible; captured in border molding by moving left and right (masseter)
- Pterygomandibular Raphe: connects buccinator and superior pharyngeal constrictor;
captured in border molding by asking patient to open wide
Mandibular Edentulous Anatomy
- Alveolar Ridge: smaller than maxillary
- Labial Frenum: attaches to orbicularis oris
- Buccal Frenum: attaches to orbicularis oris, buccinator
- Lingual Frenum: attaches to genioglossus
- Labial Vestibule: determined by superior border of mentalis
- Buccal Vestibule: determined by superior border of buccinator
- Retromolar Pad: marks distal extension of ridge; ideally covered for support and retention
since the integrity of the bone in this area is maintained; contains attachments to
temporalis, buccinator, superior pharyngeal constrictor, and pterygomandibular
raphe
- Masseteric Notch: refers to the DB area on the impression/denture; masseter contracts
when mouth closes against resistance
- Avelolingual Sulcus: between mandibular alveolar ridge and tongue
o Anterior Region: from lingual frenum to premylohyoid fossa; sublingual gland sits
above mylohyoid in this region so the flange is shorter anteriorly and should tough
the mucosa of FOM
o Middle Region: from premylohyoid fossa to distal end of mylohyoid region; flange is
deflected medially away from mandible due to prominence of mylohyoid ridge in
this area and contraction of mylohyoid medially
o Posterior Region: extends into retromylohyoid fossa; although mylohyoid attaches
higher posteriorly, the posterior fibers are directed more vertically so the denture
seats deeper and the lingual flange is longer; flange is deflected laterally toward
the ramus of the mandible to form typical S-form of lingual sulcus; denture
extension in this area is limited by palatoglossus and superior constrictor
- Buccal Shelf: lies perpendicular to occlusal forces, buccinator attaches here, provides
support for denture
Pre-Prosthetic Surgery
- Frenectomy, FGG for OD teeth
- Hypermobile Ridge: flabby edentulous ridges are common in anterior maxilla—treat with
tissue conditioner. If that doesn’t work, electrosurgery but can eliminate vestibule. Use
large relief in try or perforate custom tray when taking impression
- Epulis Fissuratum: treat with tissue conditioner and adjust flange
- Fibrous (Pendulous) Tuberosity: large tuberosities touch retromolar pads; treat by excise
tissue/bone
- Papillary Hyperplasia: multiple papillary projections of palate caused by local irritation,
ill-fitting denture, poor OHI, and leaving dentures in; candidiasis is the main cause; treat
with OHI, leave out & soak dentures overnight in 1% bleach, tissue conditioner, brush area
- Combination Syndrome: specific pattern of bone resorption in the anterior edentulous
maxilla when it is opposing mandibular anterior teeth only; overgrowth of tuberosities,
papillary hyperplasia, extrusion, loss of bone in posterior mandible
- Retained Root Tips: non-RCT tips can be infection risks; may be left if they have an intact
lamina dura and no RL
- Paget’s Disease: dentures not fitting, will need to be remade periodically
- Alveoloplasty, Vestibuloplasty, tori removal
- Bone Augmentation: bone grafts with hydroxyapatite, easy for horizontal than vertical
augmentation
Occlusion related to CD
- VDO & Dentures
Excessive versus Insufficient VDO
Excessive VDO Insufficient VDO
Display of Mandibular Excessive -
Teeth
Posterior Teeth Clicking Diminished occlusal force
Muscles of Mastication Fatigue -
Lips Appear Strained Thin Appearance
Supporting Tissue Excessive trauma Aging appearance: wrinkles,
chin too near nose,
overlapping corners of mouth
Miscellaneous Unable to wear dentures, Angular cheilitis
discomfort, gagging
- The maxillary occlusal wax rim should be parallel Camper’s line and Interpupillary line,
which can be measured with a Fox plane
- Balanced Occlusion without anterior guidance
- Lingualized Occlusion can be used to eliminate destabilizing buccal force vectors
- Phonetics:
o Fricative or Labiodental Sounds (F, V, PH): contact between maxillary incisors
and wet/dry line of lower lip; help determine position of incisal edges of maxillary
anterior teeth
o Sibilant or Linguoalveolar Sounds (S, Z, SH, CH, J): contact between tip of tongue
and the anterior palate of lingual surface of the teeth; help determine vertical length
and overlap of anterior teeth
§ Whistling: too narrow arch form
§ Lisp where S become SH: too wide arch form
§ Closest speaking space: evaluate VDO during pronunciation of S sound, the
interincisal separation should be 1-1.5mm
o Linguodental Sounds (TH): contact between tip of tongue and upper and lower
teeth; determine labiolingual position of anterior teeth
§ Tongue not visible: teeth too far forward
§ Tongue sticks out: teeth are set too far back
o Bilabial Sounds (B, P, M): contact between both lips; insufficient lip support by the
teeth or labial flange can affect production of these sounds
o Guttural Sounds (G, K): contact between back of tongue and throat
- Stability, Support, and Retention
o Retention= Surface Tension
§ Adhesion: attraction of unlike molecules; intimate contact between
denture base to tissues creates best seal; occlusal prematurities may break
retention
§ Cohesion: clinging of like molecules; thick and ropy saliva is unfavorable
§ Surface Tension: combination of adhesion and cohesion to maintain film
integrity; water are more attracted to each other than air
- Ridge: best indicator for success because has all 3 things, stability, retention, support!
Problems with Dentures
- Overextension: flange is too long -> get sore spot or ulcer -> tx: relieve denture; extends
too far back -> occlusal forces would dislodge denture
- Underextension: flange is too short -> lack of retention
- Cheek biting: insufficient horizontal overlap between maxillary and mandibular teeth; tx:
reduce buccal of posterior mandibular teeth
Denture Materials
- Heat-Cured Acrylic
o Powder
§ Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA): polymer
§ Benzoyl peroxide: initiator
§ Salts of iron, cadmium, or organic dyes: pigment
o Liquid
§ Methyl methacrylate (MMA): monomer
§ Hydroquinone: inhibitor
§ Glycol dimethacrylate: cross-linking agent,
§ Dimethyl-p-toluidine as activator
Denture Processing: shrinkage always occurs but more shrinkage if excessive monomer; ideal
ratio of monomer to polymer is 1:3;
- Porosity: due to underpacking with resin at time of processing or being heated too
rapidly
Denture Teeth
- Acrylic: better retention because can bond to acrylic resin of base
- Porcelain: more esthetic, more stain and wear resistant, brittle, mechanical retention is
achieved with pins (anterior) or diatorics (posterior)
Removable Partial Dentures
Indications: distal extension, long span, bone loss around potential abutments, finances
Kennedy Classification and Applegate’s Rules
Bilateral distal Unilateral distal Unilateral bounded Bilateral bounded
extension extension edentulous space edentulous space which
means it crosses the
midline
Applegate’s Rules:
1. Classification should be assigned after any extractions
2. Missing 3rd molars not considered
3. Abutment third molars are considered
4. Missing 2nd molars are not considered
5. Most posterior edentulous area determines the classification
6. Other edentulous areas are referred to as modifications
7. Extent of modification does not matter (# of missing teeth), only the number (# of
missing spaces)
8. Class IV cannot have any modifications by definition
Major Connectors: provides rigidity, unites all other components and not placed on movable
tissue
Connector Type Characteristics Indications
Complete Palatal Most rigid Distal extension,
Plate periodontally
compromised teeth,
shallow vault, small
mouth, flat or flabby
ridges
Maxillary Horseshoe Least rigid Large palatal torus
Palatal Strap Should cross the -
midline at a right
angle
Beading: involves scribing a 0.5mm rounded groove in the cast at the
borders of the major connector -> add strength and maintain tissue
contact to prevent food impaction
Lingual Bar Simplest and most Depth of lingual
common vestibule is >7mm
Lingual Plate Distal extension,
depth of lingual
vestibule is <7mm,
additional tooth loss
Mandibular
anticipated, lingual
tori
Labial bar Unfavorable soft Missing canine,
(swinglock) tissue contour questionable
periodontal
prognosis
- Minor Connectors: connects major connector to rests, indirect retainers, and clasps
- Rest: rigid extension of an RPD framework that contacts the O, L, or I surface of an
abutment tooth; directs forces through long axis providing support
- Rest Seat: prepared into O, L, or I surface of an abutment tooth in order to receive and
support a rest
o Occlusal: rounded semicircular one-third MD width, one-half intercuspal width,
1.5mm deep for base metal; floor inclines apically towards center -> angle formed
with vertical minor connector is <90
o Cingulum: inverted V or U shape; 2.5-3mm MD width, 2mm labiolingual width
(ledge), 1.5mm deep; benefits include good distribution of occlusal load, esthetics,
strength from closeness to major connector, CI: mandibular incisors
o Incisal: rounded notch at incisal angle; 2.5mm MD width, 1.5mm deep, indirect
retainer; less favorable leverage not often used because of esthetics
- Proximal Plate: minor connector metal plate that contacts proximal surface of abutment
tooth
- Guide Planes: flat parallel surface of abutment teeth that provide path of insertion and
removal; one-third buccolingual width, extends 2-3mm vertically down from marginal
ridge
- Indirect Retainer
o Distal extension area of a partial is “loose” and not anchored posteriorly
o Rotational movement centered around an imaginary line drawn through the most
distal rests
o Indirect retainer is directly perpendicular and anterior to the fulcrum line which
provides bracing to resist rotational movement of distal extension area
- Direct Retainer (Clasp Assembly): Rest + Minor Connector + Clasp Arms (Retentive (RA) &
Reciprocal (RBA))
o Extracoronal retainer: common, conventional “clasp” design; encircle a tooth at
least 180 to prevent movement away from clasp
o Intracoronal retainer: precision attachment with key and keyway pattern; no clasps
-> more esthetic
o Retentive Clasp (Buccal usually): originates from minor connector and rest; contacts
tooth below HOC/survey line
§ Shoulder and middle should be above HOC, only the tip should be under HOC
§ Tip is designed to engage in undercut and resist dislodging forces—only
active when dislodging forces are applied to them, otherwise seat passively
o Reciprocal/Stabilizing Clasp (Lingual usually): originates from minor connector and
rest; contact tooth above HOC/survey line
§ Braces abutment tooth so it is not torqued by retentive clasp
o Clasp Designs
§ Suprabulge: originate above survey class
• Circumferential (Akers): most common clasp!
• Ring: undercut adjacent to bounded edentulous space
• Embrasure: 2 Akers clasps that go between two teeth and encircle
them; 2 rests next to each other
• Combination: retentive arm is made of wrought wire
§ Infrabulge: originate below survey line; need vestibule depth
• T bar: T-shape
• I bar: I-shape
• Bar type
• Y type
Clasp Assemblies & Selection
Type Design Indications
RPI Rest (away from proximal plate), Ideal Class II lever system, Distal
Proximal Plate, I bar Extension (1)
RPA/RPC Rest, Proximal Plate, Aker’s BES with rests adjacent to edentulous
clasp/circumferential clasp space, Distal Extension (2)
Wrought Wire Flexible clasp resulting in less Periodontally compromised/endo-
torque; soldered in position treated teeth, Distal Extension (3)
- Distal Extension RPDs: rotate when a force is directed on the denture base because of
displacement of the sot tissue of the residual ridge and the ligament of the abutment teeth.
o Altered Cast Technique: records the form of the edentulous segment by means of
the metal RDP framework, which holds the custom tray material -> improves
adaptation of base, equalize stress to ridge and abutments
- Framework Material: Cobalt-Chromium
o 2.3% shrinkage which causes irregularities and porosity
o Chromium prevents corrosion of
o Cold-working/ plastic deformation: involves manipulating the metal while at
ambient temperature -> clasp assembly is cold-worked every time it is seated and
dislodged -> main reason why clasps break; yield strength=cold-working! & high
modulus of elasticity
Fixed Prosthodontics
Inlay: within cusps; less than 1/3 of isthmus is prepared, low caries risk patients
Onlay: covers cusps
- Collar: beveled shoulder around capped cusp for bracing
- Skirt: feather-edge margin
- Provide secondary retention & resistance form
- Beveled Margins: good fit of gold to tooth, strong margin, burnished gold to margin
¾ and 7/8 crowns: hybrid gold restorations between onlay and full crown that conserves tooth
structure, less restorative margin in close proximity to gingival tissues, and more easily seated
during cementation
Crown Tooth Preparation
Occlusal Reduction within occlusal table (cusp
tip to cusp tip along marginal ridges)
Functional Cusp Bevel: 2 planes of reduction on
functional cusps for posterior
#1 lab complaint= tooth is undereduced!!
Three Principles of Tooth Preparation:
Biologic: health of oral tissues
Mechanical: integrity and durability of
restoration
Esthetic: appearance of restoration
- Biologic Concerns
o Mechanical injury: thinnest gingival tissue is lingual molars and facial premolars
o Thermal injury: proximity to pulp; water spray, sharp cutting instruments,
intermittent light pressure
o Chemical injury: soaked retraction cord, certain cements
o Bacterial injury: leakage under crown
o Don’t impinge on Biologic Width!!! BW= 1mm CT + 1mm JE
- Mechanical Concerns
o Retention form: those features that prevent removal of crown along long axis of the
tooth prep
§ Most important Taper/Parallelism
§ Geometry/surface area of tooth preparation, roughness of fitting surface,
materials being cemented, film thickness of luting agent, grooves
o Resistance Form: features that prevent removal of crown by apical, horizontal, or
oblique forces (occlusal forces)
§ Grooves, cement
o Taper or Parallelism: angle of convergence formed between two opposite
prepared axial surfaces, most operator control, ideal 6-10 degrees
o Height or Length: 3mm minimum for incisors and premolars and 4mm for molars
o Width: MD or FL dimension of base
o Height to Base Ratio: minimum ratio is 0.4; height is more important than width
o Short clinical crown-> buccal grooves for retention, proximal grooves for
resistance
o Reduction vs. Clearance: not always the same i.e. tilted tooth
- Esthetics Concerns: gold>PFM>all ceramic
Crown/Veneer Preparation Measurement
Margin Type Occlusal/Incisal Axial TOC
Reduction Reduction
Metal Light Chamfer Functional: 1.5mm 10-20
0.5mm Non-functional: 1mm degrees
Porcelain/Metal Heavy Chamfer Functional: 2.0mm 1.2-1.5mm 10-20
Labial: 1.2-1.3mm Non-functional: 1.5mm degrees
Lingual: 0.5-0.7mm
All Ceramic Shoulder Anterior: 1.5-2mm 1.2-1.5mm 10-20
Labial: > 1-1.2mm Posterior: 2mm degrees
Lingual: > 1-1.2mm
360 degrees
Zirconia Shoulder 1.0 Functional: 1.5-2mm 1-1.5mm 10-20
360 degrees Non-functional: 1-1.5mm degrees
Central Groove: 1.5mm
Porcelain Gingival: 0.3mm Incisal 1-2mm - -
Veneer Facial: 0.5mm
- 2 Margins: edge of crown and edge of tooth prep
- Margin Types: SupraG>ParaG>SubG
o Featheredge: very acute, thin margin that is less invasive and provides best
marginal seal; insufficient clearance for most materials, difficult to visualize
o Light chamfer: 0.3-0.5mm thick, gold crowns; wide gold collars of PFM crowns
o Heavy chamfer: 1-1.5mm thick, PFM crowns and some all ceramic crowns; if not
given enough room, lab will overcontour crown
o Shoulder: 1-1.5mm thick, porcelain for PFM and all-ceramic crowns; potential for
pulpal embarrassment from aggressive preparation
Pontic Designs
Design Sanitary/ Saddle/ Conical Modified Ridge Ovate
Hygienic Ridge-Lap Lap
Location Posterior NEVER USE Molar Anteriors Anteriors
Mandible
Advantages Good hygiene - Good hygiene, Good esthetics Superior
better Esthetics
esthetics
Disadvantages Poor esthetics, Bad Hygiene - - Requires
Requires VDO surgery
& good
ridge
Connector Design
- Rigid: either cast in one piece or soldered
- Nonrigid: indicated when it is impossible to obtain a common path of insertion between
abutments i.e. male/female
- Connectors for PFM bridges should have a minimum of 3mm height (occlusogingivally)
Occlusal Schemes to Use
- Occlusal point contacts preferred to be broad and flat to prevent wear
- Cusp-marginal ridge: seen in Class I occlusion and with unworn teeth
- Cusp-fossa: seen in Class II malocclusion
Tissue Management of Impressions
- Fluid control: cotton rolls, suction, antisialagogues (Atropine)
- Tissue displacement
o Retraction Cords: stretch circumferential periodontal fibers
o Impregnated cords: AlCl (Hemodent), FeSO4 (Viscostat), Epinephrine
o Electrosurgery: electrode must not contact tooth
Impression Materials
Types Description Precautions
Reversible Changes between sol Pour immediately
Hydrocolloid (Agar) and gel based on temp Use only with stone
with equipment
High accuracy
Problems with
Aqueous*/** moisture
Irreversible Most inaccurate -> Setting time: 3-4mins
Hydrocolloid Diagnostic Casts P->W
(Alginate) Ingredients: Pour within gypsum
diatomaceous earth, in 10mins
potassium alginate
Polysulfide polymer** Water byproduct Pour within 30-45
mins
Moisture tolerant
(hydrophobic)
Condensation Silicone Alcohol byproduct -> Pour within 30 mins
shrinkage