| Literature DB >> 35382057 |
Meetu Preet Jain1, Preet Rajendra Jain2, Harneet Singh Chawla3, Rahul Narayan Gaikwad4, Om Chandrakant Wadhokar5, Chaitanya Ajay Kulkarni5, Waqar Mohsin Naqvi6,7.
Abstract
A common consequence of moderate to extreme periodontitis is pathologic migration. This denotes tooth movement when the periodontal disease interjects the equilibrium among the elements that preserve physiological tooth position. The balancing factors can migrate the teeth in any direction. The etiology of pathological migration tends to be multifactorial, thus achieving early diagnosis is imperative, which will ultimately lead to the prompt removal of the etiological factors while avoiding severe bone destruction. In this case maxillary central incisors had diastema due to pathological migration with mobility grade I in maxillary left central incisor. Many cases of moderate to severe pathological migration need a suitable, interdisciplinary approach. Nevertheless, since it is possible to detect mild cases of Pathological tooth migration (PTM) at an early stage, spontaneous correction of migrated teeth can be accomplished by periodontal therapy alone. Regardless of the treatment selected, maintenance of stable results should be considered as an aim of treatment. Copyright: Meetu Preet Jain et al.Entities:
Keywords: Diastema; case report; pathologic tooth migration; periodontitis; splinting
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35382057 PMCID: PMC8956899 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.39.29953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1pre-operative midline diastema
Figure 2X-ray shows periapical radiolucency
Figure 3post debridement
Figure 4defect treated with bone graft
Figure 5midline diastema closed completely