| Literature DB >> 30083219 |
Saeed Asgary1, Leyla Roghanizadeh2.
Abstract
As the dental pulp could not be directly inspected before endodontic treatment, indirect evaluation of the pulp status via (para)/clinical tests should be performed which need careful inspection. This report presents a root-treated right maxillary first molar with recurrent abscess formation and a radiolucent periradicular lesion surrounding the distobuccal root of the right maxillary second molar. The patient underwent surgical retreatment, employing CEM root-end filling, which resulted in no relief from sign/symptoms. In the cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT), the relationship of the lesion with the mesio-buccal root of the second maxillary molar was detected. Despite the latest tooth showed positive responses to pulp sensibility tests, endodontic therapy was planned for it. During treatment, it became clear that the mesiobuccal canal pulp was necrotic, although vital pulp tissues were present in two other root canals. Following treatment, full recovery from all discomforts was obtained and the lesion healed after 18 months. This case showed that a more complicated evaluation such as CBCT should be used for diagnosis of perpetuated lesions. Furthermore, it might be probable that root canals of vital teeth become necrotic due to involvement in the adjacent apical lesion, a phenomenon known as anachoresis.Entities:
Keywords: Anachoresis; Apical Periodontitis; CEM Cement; Calcium-Enriched Mixture; Dental Pulp Necrosis; Endodontic; Spread of Infection
Year: 2018 PMID: 30083219 PMCID: PMC6064033 DOI: 10.22037/iej.v13i3.22089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran Endod J ISSN: 1735-7497
Figure 1Periapical images: A) Preoperative; B) Postoperative image after distal root-end surgery of right maxillary first molar; C) Postoperative two-month follow-up; D) Post-RCT image of the maxillary second molar; E) 18-month follow-up: healed periradicular lesion
Figure 2CBCT views showing obvious relationship between the mesiobuccal root of the maxillary second molar and the lesion