1.Intentional replantation for the retreatment of mandibular second molar: a case report.
Meijuan CAI ; Shaowen XIANG ; Chengjie XIE ; Chuhong OUYANG ; Fangli TONG
West China Journal of Stomatology 2023;41(4):471-477
When the use of root canal retreatment and apical surgery experiences difficulty in treating endodontic diseases, intentional replantation is an optional clinical technique used to retain the tooth. A 28-year-old female complained of chewing discomfort at the mandibular second molar after undergoing root canal treatment 3 month ago. History record and radiographic examination revealed that a C-shaped root canal system was filled with gutta-percha in the mandibular second molar. A radiolucency area existed at the root furcal area with a thin canal wall in the distal and mesial roots. Intentional replantation was used to treat this tooth. The clinical and radiographic results showed that intentional replantation and nano-biomaterial application facilitated infection control, tooth retention, and periodontal tissue regeneration.
Female
;
Humans
;
Adult
;
Tooth Replantation
;
Root Canal Therapy
;
Dental Pulp Cavity
;
Gutta-Percha/therapeutic use*
;
Tooth Root
;
Molar/surgery*
;
Retreatment
2.Cognition about emergency management of avulsed incisor in children among dentists in Guangdong province.
Li ZHANG ; Jing XIE ; Ying CHEN ; Shuman DENG ; Luyi CHEN ; Qi GAO
West China Journal of Stomatology 2023;41(3):323-332
OBJECTIVES:
This study aimed to evaluate and analyze the current situation of dentists in Guangdong pro-vince regarding the management of avulsed incisors, thereby providing a reference for making treatment strategies for avulsed incisors in the future.
METHODS:
A total of 712 dentists with different educational backgrounds and working conditions in Guangdong province were randomly selected to conduct an online questionnaire survey on the cognition of children with avulsed incisors from April 2022 to May 2022. The data were recorded by Excel software and statistics were analyzed on Stata/SE 15.1.
RESULTS:
A total of 712 dentists were investigated and 701 questionnaires were collected (98.46%). In addition, 65.9% of investigators came from the Department of Stomatology in a First-class Hospital or Stomatological Hospital. The results showed that the average number of avulsed teeth consulted by dentists was less than 20 per year. Although 99.7% of respondents considered normal saline as a suitable storage medium, 3.1% and 23.8% of them had a misunderstanding that the tap/alcohol could be used for root cleaning. Moreover, 93.4% was the correct selection rate of the treatment plan for processing on root surfaces before replanting by investigators. The correct selection rate of the duration using elastic fixation was only 10.7%. Meanwhile, 42.9% of investigators refused to inoculate tetanus immunoglobulin after teeth replanting. Emergency management of dental avulsion (EM) and clinical management of dental avulsion (CM) answered correctly with average scores of 14.60±11.85 and 14.48±2.67, respectively. Multivariate linear regression analysis revealed that working years were negatively correlated with EM and CM scores (P<0.05). There was a positive correlation between CM and EM scores with the number of avulsion cases treated by physicians each year (P<0.05). In terms of the EM score of dentists' learning attitude, investigators who had received enough knowledge were higher than those who had not and insufficient knowledge reserved, and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05). The scores of investigators who thought they had a certain degree of knowledge about dental trauma were higher than those who thought they "did not understand", and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05). In terms of CM scores, investigators who thought the knowledge of dental trauma was "very helpful" had higher scores than those who thought it was "not helpful", and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05). The scores of the investigators who thought they had "relatively sufficient knowledge" of dental trauma were higher than those who thought they had "no knowledge" or "insufficient know-ledge", and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
The overall accuracy of the management of avulsed incisors among dentists was low in Guangdong province. Dentists were more likely to have a higher rate of accuracy choice in treatment options for luxation injury and avulsion to enhance the prognosis of replanted teeth.
Humans
;
Child
;
Tooth Avulsion/therapy*
;
Incisor
;
Tooth Replantation/methods*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Dentists
;
Cognition
;
China
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
3.Expert consensus on stabilization with splint in traumatic dental injuries of permanent tooth.
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2022;57(4):326-333
Stabilization with splint is an important surgical technology in traumatic dental injuries of permanent tooth. In order to standardize the clinical application of the technique and to improve the therapeutic effects of traumatic injured teeth, the Society of Stomatological Emergency, Chinese Stomatological Association organized relevant professional experts and put forward an expert consensus on the basis of considerable discussion. The contents of the present expert consensus covered indications for tooth fixation, material selection of splints and operation methods, applying to the treatment of tooth loosening, tooth displacement and tooth avulsion replantation caused by traumatic injuries. It is also suitable for preoperative and prognosis evaluations of traumatic injured teeth before tooth fixation.
Consensus
;
Dentition, Permanent
;
Humans
;
Splints
;
Tooth Avulsion/therapy*
;
Tooth Injuries/therapy*
;
Tooth Replantation/methods*
4.Effect of calcium hydroxide on inflammatory root resorption and ankylosis in replanted teeth compared with other intracanal materials: a review
Maryam ZARE JAHROMI ; Mahmood Reza KALANTAR MOTAMEDI
Restorative Dentistry & Endodontics 2019;44(3):e32-
Calcium hydroxide (CH) is the gold-standard intracanal dressing for teeth subjected to traumatic avulsion. A common complication after the replantation of avulsed teeth is root resorption (RR). The current review was conducted to compare the effect of CH with that of other intracanal medications and filling materials on inflammatory RR and replacement RR (ankylosis) in replanted teeth. The PubMed and Scopus databases were searched through June 2018 using specific keywords related to the title of the present article. The materials that were compared to CH were in 2 categories: 1) mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) and endodontic sealers as permanent filling materials for single-visit treatment, and 2) Ledermix, bisphosphonates, acetazolamide, indomethacin, gallium nitrate, and enamel matrix-derived protein (Emdogain) as intracanal medicaments for multiple-visit management of avulsed teeth prior to the final obturation. MTA can be used as a single-visit root filling material; however, there are limited data on its efficacy due to a lack of clinical trials. Ledermix and acetazolamide were comparable to CH in reducing RR. Emdogain seems to be an interesting material, but the data supporting its use as an intracanal medication remain very limited. The conclusions drawn in this study were limited by the insufficiency of clinical trials.
Acetazolamide
;
Ankylosis
;
Bandages
;
Calcium Hydroxide
;
Calcium
;
Dental Enamel
;
Diphosphonates
;
Gallium
;
Indomethacin
;
Miners
;
Pemetrexed
;
Replantation
;
Root Resorption
;
Tooth Ankylosis
;
Tooth Avulsion
;
Tooth Replantation
;
Tooth
5.Treatment of a tooth with severe periodontal involvement using intentional replantation: case report
Youn Kyung CHOI ; Kyoung Hwa JUNG ; Ju Youn LEE ; Ji Young JOO ; Hyun Joo KIM ; Eun Young KWON
Journal of Dental Rehabilitation and Applied Science 2019;35(2):98-104
Although intentional replantation is frequently used as a treatment modality for endodontic problems, severe periodontal involvement has usually been regarded as a contraindication. However, there are some studies suggesting that intentional replantation could be a successful treatment alternative for periodontally involved teeth. This paper reports the treatment of a tooth with severe periodontal involvement using intentional replantation. The tooth, which had had root canal therapy due to endodontic-periodontal combined lesion but showed extensive bone loss, was gently extracted and replanted after thorough debridement of the root surface. By intentional replantation, a tooth with severe periodontal involvement in this case could be preserved, without extraction, over the course of a 3-year follow-up period.
Alveolar Bone Loss
;
Debridement
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Periodontal Attachment Loss
;
Periodontal Diseases
;
Replantation
;
Root Canal Therapy
;
Tooth Replantation
;
Tooth
6.Evaluation of the periodontal and pulpal healing of replanted rat molars with doxycycline root conditioning
Ok Hyung NAM ; Kyounga CHEON ; Mi Sun KIM ; Hyo Seol LEE ; Sung Chul CHOI
Journal of Periodontal & Implant Science 2019;49(3):148-157
PURPOSE: This study aimed to evaluate periodontal and pulpal healing in replanted rat teeth, preserved under different storage conditions, with or without root conditioning using doxycycline. METHODS: A total of 40 maxillary first molars extracted from 20 Sprague-Dawley rats were stored for different durations under different conditions (5 minutes in dry storage and 60 minutes in Hank's balanced salt solution [HBSS]) and subsequently replanted. The rats were divided into 2 groups based on the use of root surface treatment: the doxycycline group (root surface treated with doxycycline) and the control group (no doxycycline treatment). Eight weeks after replantation, the animals were sacrificed, and the teeth were evaluated using micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and histomorphometric analysis. RESULTS: In the micro-CT analysis, the doxycycline group showed the same rate of occurrence of periapical radiolucency as was observed in the control group, but a lower degree of root resorption in teeth replanted after 60 minutes of storage in HBSS (P<0.05). In the histomorphometric analysis, the doxycycline group exhibited no improvement in either pulpal or periodontal healing of the replanted tooth after 5 minutes of dry storage, but showed a lower grade of surface root resorption (1.37±0.77) and inflammatory resorption in the teeth stored for 60 minutes in HBSS (1.33±0.71). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, doxycycline improved the periodontal healing of replanted teeth stored for 60 minutes in HBSS, whereas doxycycline did not improve periodontal healing of replanted tooth after 5 minutes of dry storage. Within the limits of this study, doxycycline showed more favorable periodontal healing despite delayed replantation.
Animals
;
Doxycycline
;
Molar
;
Rats
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Regeneration
;
Replantation
;
Root Resorption
;
Tooth
;
Tooth Injuries
7.Effects of the cathepsin K inhibitor with mineral trioxide aggregate cements on osteoclastic activity
Hee Sun KIM ; Soojung KIM ; Hyunjung KO ; Minju SONG ; Miri KIM
Restorative Dentistry & Endodontics 2019;44(2):e17-
OBJECTIVES: Root resorption is an unexpected complication after replantation procedures. Combining anti-osteoclastic medicaments with retrograde root filling materials may avert this resorptive activity. The purpose of this study was to assess effects of a cathepsin K inhibitor with calcium silicate-based cements on osteoclastic activity. METHODS: MC3T3-E1 cells were cultured for biocompatibility analyses. RAW 264.7 cells were cultured in the presence of the receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B and lipopolysaccharide, followed by treatment with Biodentine (BIOD) or ProRoot MTA with or without medicaments (Odanacatib [ODN], a cathepsin inhibitor and alendronate, a bisphosphonate). After drug treatment, the cell counting kit-8 assay and Alizarin red staining were performed to evaluate biocompatibility in MC3T3-E1 cells. Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) staining and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays were performed in RAW 264.7 cells to determine the expression levels of inflammatory cytokines, interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Data were analyzed by one-way analysis of variance and Tukey's post hoc test (p < 0.05). RESULTS: Biocompatibility results showed that there were no significant differences among any of the groups. RAW 264.7 cells treated with BIOD and ODN showed the lowest levels of TNF-α and PGE2. Treatments with BIOD + ODN were more potent suppressors of inflammatory cytokine expression (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: The cathepsin K inhibitor with calcium silicate-based cement inhibits osteoclastic activity. This may have clinical application in preventing inflammatory root resorption in replanted teeth.
Acid Phosphatase
;
Alendronate
;
Calcium
;
Cathepsin K
;
Cathepsins
;
Cell Count
;
Cytokines
;
Dinoprostone
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Interleukin-6
;
Interleukins
;
Miners
;
Necrosis
;
Osteoblasts
;
Osteoclasts
;
Pemetrexed
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
RAW 264.7 Cells
;
Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-kappa B
;
Replantation
;
Root Resorption
;
Tooth
8.Anatomical analysis of the resected roots of mandibular first molars after failed non-surgical retreatment.
Jiyoung YOON ; Byeong Hoon CHO ; Jihyun BAE ; Yonghoon CHOI
Restorative Dentistry & Endodontics 2018;43(2):e16-
OBJECTIVES: Understanding the reason for an unsuccessful non-surgical endodontic treatment outcome, as well as the complex anatomy of the root canal system, is very important. This study examined the cross-sectional root canal structure of mandibular first molars confirmed to have failed non-surgical root canal treatment using digital images obtained during intentional replantation surgery, as well as the causative factors of the failed conventional endodontic treatments. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study evaluated 115 mandibular first molars. Digital photographic images of the resected surface were taken at the apical 3 mm level and examined. The discolored dentin area around the root canal was investigated by measuring the total surface area, the treated areas as determined by the endodontic filling material, and the discolored dentin area. RESULTS: Forty 2-rooted teeth showed discolored root dentin in both the mesial and distal roots. Compared to the original filled area, significant expansion of root dentin discoloration was observed. Moreover, the mesial roots were significantly more discolored than the distal roots. Of the 115 molars, 92 had 2 roots. Among the mesial roots of the 2-rooted teeth, 95.7% of the roots had 2 canals and 79.4% had partial/complete isthmuses and/or accessory canals. CONCLUSIONS: Dentin discoloration that was not visible on periapical radiographs and cone-beam computed tomography was frequently found in mandibular first molars that failed endodontic treatment. The complex anatomy of the mesial roots of the mandibular first molars is another reason for the failure of conventional endodontic treatment.
Cone-Beam Computed Tomography
;
Dental Pulp Cavity
;
Dentin
;
Molar*
;
Replantation
;
Retreatment*
;
Tooth
;
Tooth Apex
;
Tooth Root
;
Treatment Outcome
9.Outcome of Regenerative Endodontic Treatment for an Avulsed Immature Permanent Tooth: A Case Report
Journal of Korean Academy of Pediatric Dentistry 2018;45(2):250-256
Dental avulsion, defined as the complete displacement of a tooth from the alveolar bone with consequent loss of the blood and nerve supply, was reported as one of the most severe dental injuries. Avulsion can cause tissue ischemia, which leads to pulp necrosis.Apexification is a conventional treatment method that induces an apical calcified barrier in immature roots with pulp necrosis. However, root development characterized by an increase in the root thickness and length cannot be achieved by apexification.The purpose of this case report was to describe the radiographic and clinical outcomes of regenerative endodontic treatment for the avulsed and necrosed permanent tooth with an immature root after replantation in a 5-year-old girl; the treatment was performed using a mixture of ciprofloxacin, metronidazole and cefaclor, CollaTape and Biodentine.
Apexification
;
Cefaclor
;
Child, Preschool
;
Ciprofloxacin
;
Dental Pulp Necrosis
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Ischemia
;
Methods
;
Metronidazole
;
Replantation
;
Tooth
10.Effects of platelet-rich plasma on tooth replantation in dogs: a histologic and histomorphometric analysis
Jun Mo YANG ; Keon Il YANG ; Kyung Hyun LEE ; Seong Ho CHOI ; Byung Ock KIM ; Joo Cheol PARK ; Sang Joun YU
Journal of Periodontal & Implant Science 2018;48(4):224-235
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) on periodontal healing of replanted root surfaces in dogs histologically and histomorphometrically. METHODS: A total of 36 roots of mandibular incisors and premolars from 6 mongrel dogs were used. The roots were randomly divided into 3 groups: 1) a positive control group (n=12), in which the periodontal ligament (PDL) and cementum were retained and the roots were soaked in saline; 2) a negative control group (n=12), in which the PDL and cementum were removed and the roots were soaked in saline; and 3) an experimental group (n=12), in which the PDL and cementum were removed and the roots were soaked in PRP. After soaking the root surfaces, the extracted roots were replanted into the extraction sockets. The roots were covered using a coronally repositioned flap RESULTS: Histologically, irregular-thickness PDL-like and cementum-like tissues were observed in the 4-week experimental group and the positive control group. PDL-like tissue and cementum-like tissue with a more uniform thickness were observed at 8 weeks. In the negative control group, PDL-like tissue and cementum-like tissue were rarely found, and root resorption and ankylosis were observed. In the cross-sectional histomorphometric analysis, the experimental group demonstrated a higher rate of formation of cementum-like tissue and a lower tooth ankylosis rate than the positive and negative control groups at 4 and 8 weeks. Although there was a significant difference in the tooth ankylosis rate and the formation of cementum-like tissue across the 3 groups (P < 0.05), no statistical significance was observed between any pair of groups (P > 0.017). CONCLUSIONS: Applying PRP to root surfaces during tooth replantation in dogs can reduce tooth ankylosis and increase PDL-like and cementum-like tissue formation.
Animals
;
Ankylosis
;
Bicuspid
;
Clothing
;
Dental Cementum
;
Dogs
;
Incisor
;
Periodontal Ligament
;
Periodontitis
;
Platelet-Rich Plasma
;
Root Resorption
;
Tooth Ankylosis
;
Tooth Replantation
;
Tooth

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