6.DENTAL TRAUMA 2..HO New
6.DENTAL TRAUMA 2..HO New
6.DENTAL TRAUMA 2..HO New
TRAUMATIC INJURY
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• INTRODUCTION
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ETIOLOGY
•Falls in infancy
•Child abuse
•Falls and collision
•Sports injury
•Road traffic accident
•Epileptic fits
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Prevalence
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An average of 22,000 occur annually among children less than 18yrs.
Over 80% of all dental injuries involve the upper teeth.
30% of preschoolers have had a dental injury of some kind.
Of all sports, baseball and basketball were associated with the
largest number of dental injuries.
Children with primary teeth sustained over half of the dental injuries
in activities associated with home furniture.
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ELLIES CLASSIFICATION
• CLASS 1 Enamel fracture
• CLASS 2 Dentin fracture without pulp exposure
• CLASS 3 Crown fracture with pulp exposure
• CLASS 4 Non –vital tooth
• CLASS 5 Avulsion
• CLASS 6 Root fracture with or without crown fracture
• CLASS 7 Subluxation ,luxation,
• CLASS 8 complete fracture of crown
• CLASS 9 Deciduous tooth fracture
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• Symptom
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• In a young patient even though pulp is not exposed , if the
break has bared the dentin, the tooth will become sensitive to
temperature changes and to sweet and sour.
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• DIAGNOSIS
• It is made from complete examination of the patient.
• Complete examination is done by
A) Good and relevant history
B) Clinical examination
C) Sensitivity test
D) Radiographic examination
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Crown Fracture without Pulp exposure
NO PROBLEM,
RELAX AND RESTORE
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Complicated Crown fracture with Pulp Exposure=vital pulp
therapy
@80% IF
w/in 24hrs
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• For fractured crown with pulp exposure
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2. Crown-Root Fracture
sometimes fractures at an angle
Angular Fracture:
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Is this 13
restorable?
3. Vertical Root Fracture
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Transillumination Restoration Removal + Staining
Other methods of discovering VERTICAL ROOT FRACTURE A surgical
exploration is usually the only other way to confirm presence of VRF*
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Horizontal Root Fracture
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Root Fracture (Horizontal)
Try to reposition and splint 2-4 wks, check for vitality q 30 days
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4. Luxation Injuries
(MOST COMMON OF ALL DENTAL INJURIES)
30-44%
• Concussion
WORST CASE SEQUELAE?
• Subluxation
• Extrusion
• Lateral PULP NECROSIS
• Intrusive
EXTERNAL/INTERNAL
ROOT RESORPTION
Possible tooth loss
AVULSION
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Concussion Luxation Injury
• No radiographic
abnormalities
• Assess vitality in 4 wks
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Subluxation Luxation Injury
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Extrusion Luxation Injury
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Titanium Trauma Splint
Medaris AG, Basel Switzerland
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TTS splint
•Splinting of traumatized teeth with a new device:TTS (Titanium
Trauma Splint)
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Lateral Luxation Injury
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Treatment of intrusion luxation
• Closed apex needs ortho. or surgical repositioning and
probable RCT ( root canal therapy) in 1-3 weeks
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5. Avulsion
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• REPLANTATION
• Also refer as Reimplantation- is the insertion of a tooth in its
socket after complete avulsion resulting from traumatic
injury.
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• factors affecting success rate of replant
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• Treatment is aimed at minimizing the inflammation from the
two main consequences of avulsion, namely; attachment
damage and pulpal infection that inevitably results
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Extra oral time
•One of the most critical factors affecting prognosis.
• The avulsed tooth should be replanted as soon as possible.
•Shorter the extra oral time ,the better the prognosis for
retention of the replanted tooth.
• When replant within 30 min only showed 10% resorption
whereas the 95% resorbed when replanted more than 2 hrs after
avulsion.
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• STORAGE MEDIA
1. Preferably in the socket
2. Other media patient saliva, milk,normal saline,
3. Recently developed and marketed storage media is HBSS
(hank’s balanced salt solution)
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First Aid Instructions
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ONCE IN DENTAL OFFICE:
•Take films to make sure if there is:
- no alveolar fracture
- that adjacent teeth are OK
•“Save-a-tooth” in
Hank’s Balanced Salt solution
milk
saline
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– Gently clean socket
– Replant and check occlusion
– Splint
– antibiotics
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• Do Not:
1. Handle by root
2. Scrub root
3. Allow tooth to dry
4. Submerge the tooth in water
(tap water is hypotonic>
and will cause cell rupture)
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What if a baby tooth is completely knocked out?
• Primary teeth (baby) are different than adult teeth and the
treatment is different.
• Primary teeth are generally not replanted into the socket.
• The reason for not replanting is that
the primary tooth may cause an infection to spread to the
permanent tooth
. It may also affect the eruption pattern of the permanent
tooth.
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Plug for Prevention
• Mouth guards***
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Plug for Prevention
Mouth guards
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TMJ (TEMPOROMANDIBULAR)
DISLOCATION
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• The TMJ consists of articulation of temporal and mandibular
bones
• TMJ dislocation occur when condyle travel anteriorly along
the articular eminence and become locked in the anterior
superior aspect of eminence , preventing closure of the
mouth.
• Dislocation result in stretching of ligament and associated
with severe spasm of muscle
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intrinsic or self induced cause
– Excessive yawning
– Vomiting
– Singing and laughing loudly
– Opening mouth too wide for eating
muscle contraction
• due to dystonic reaction to drugs
• seizure
• tetanus
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extrinsic cause
– blow on the chin while the mouth is opening
– Injudicious use of mouth gag during GA.
– Excessive pressure on the mouth.
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patient prone to mandibular dislocation include
anatomic mismatch between the fossa and articular
eminence
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Classifiction
• acute dislocation
• chronic recurrent dislocation
• unilateral
• Bilateral
• Subluxation /incomplete dislocation/
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Clinical feature
• unilateral or bilateral
Unilateral
• difficulty of mastication, swallowing and speech.
• Deviation of the chin toward contralateral side.
• Mouth is partial open
• Depression in front of tragus
• Affected condyle cannot be palpated
• Lateral cross bite
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bilateral
• Pain in temporal region
• Inability to close mouth
• Tenderness of masticatory muscle
• Excessive salivation
• Protruding chin
• Anterior open bite
• Muscle spasm
• Drooling saliva
• Mandibular movement restricted.
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Unilateral Bilateral
Difficulty of mastication, swallowing Pain in temporal region
and speech. Tenderness of masticatory muscle
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Diagnosis
• Diagnosis made clinically
• panaromic jaw radiographs to exclude a mandibular fracture
specially for children
• CT patient with jaw dislocation in setting of facial trauma
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• management
• Manipulation procedure
• Patient should be given assurance and asked to relax completely
LA is injected into glenoid fossa.
• This will eliminate pain and spontaneous reduction
Stand in front of patient and grasp mandible with both hands.
Thumbs are covered with gauze. As sudden reduction can trap
the thumbs.
Thumbs are placed on occlusal surface of lower molars and
finger tips are placed below chin.
Exert downward pressure on posterior teeth to depress jaw and
at the same time upward and backward pressure with fingertips
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• extraoral technique
• another option if intra oral and syringe technique fails
• requires firm pressure on mandibular angle
• usually painful
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following reduction
•avoid extreme opening of jaw for 3wk
•support the lower when yawning
•apply warm compress to TMJ area for 24 hr
•maintain a soft diet for one wk.
•NSAID PRN.
•Reevaluate after 2/3 wk.
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Complication of reduction
• Iatrogenic condyle #
• Human bite
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Thank you
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