Dental Trauma 2
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Transcript of Dental Trauma 2
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Pedo. Lec 3
Dental trauma: examination, diagnosis and treatment planning of dental
trauma.
Done by: AlaaAlsmadi.
___________________________________________________________________________
We will be talking about:
1- the principles of trauma management,2- the diagnosis, and3- the treatment planning aspects.
1st principles of trauma management:
1-Triage and stabilizing the patient :
Triage means: is to prioritize things , for example: the level of consciousness
assessment at the beginning is more important than noticing the crown
fracture.
Especially if you are working in a hospital; in emergency room and a patient
came to you after road traffic accident, with oral and maxillofacial trauma or
dental trauma ; there are principles that should follow to manage the
patient.
Stabilize: is to stabilize the patient regarding to the vital signs, be sure that
the vital sign is ok, and the neurological signs is ok, then you go to other
issues, {from the most important to the least important} , so you have to do
neurological assessment; how do you do this?
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Neurological assessment:
You look for any sign of disorientation, amnesia, vomiting, nausea,drowsiness, all these indicate a neurological problem ,
Paresthesia of the lips or any were else, indicates an injury to thenerves.
battle sign: mastoid hematoma , the mastoid process is swollen Raccoon sign: hematoma around the eye. Skull fracture : any Fracture or discharge of the cerebrospinal fluid
{CSF}, especially from the nose or from the ears.
Subjective assessment which you can obviously seen.
2- The second principle: is that you have to treat injury as soon as possible
and avoid delays as much as you can.
3- you should be calm and professional in your approach; usually the patient
will be panic and campaigning people with him so you have to be calm and
reassuring them to finish the job properly, but if you were anxious and the
patient anxious then you will never get the job done.4-You have to do documentation, record everything, take photographs, take
x-rays , so if the patient get any risks or consequences after his injury then
you have documentation of how the injury was .
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2nddiagnosis:
For the diagnosis to be performed you need to record everything then you
reach the diagnosis , then you come up with treatment plane.
A dental injury should always be considered an emergency and be treated
immediately.
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$$ the rational of the treatment is to improve the prognosis.
##the aims of the treatment are:
to relive pain, which is the most important. to enhance functionesthetics.
History:
A series of questions must be asked to aid in diagnosis and treatment
planning, and these include the following aspects:
1-Patients name, age, sex, address, and telephone number.2-Medical history: if the patient hasfor example
- bleeding disorders, it will affect the treatment or if he has- heart conditions , he might needs prophylaxis- Diabetes: delays wound healing, or may need insulin; you have to
make sure that diabetes is under control.
- Epilepsy: if the patient has continuous seizures it will also affectyour treatment
- Allergies: if the patient allergic to anything.- Medications that are being taken by the patient, if he takes certain
medication every day then you have to make sure that he takes his
medication.
- Tetanus immunization:(tetanus: (Immunization is usually received at young age (2-2 ) years.
We need a booster every 10 years. Immunization is indicated after trauma if
the site is contaminated with soil if the patient hasnt received a booster in
the last 5 years. So the 1stdose should be at 2 years, 2nddose should be
taken after 10 years (at age of: 12-13 years). If we have 14-15 years , we ask
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if he receive booster in the last 5 years, if he receive a booster then we dont
have to give him any dose, if he didnt receive then you should immunize
him against tetanus. Usually no one get booster after 10 years in our
country, so we give him, if the wound contaminated.
Tetanus is uncommon, infectious but non-communicable disease. Itscaused
by bacteria (clostridium tetani) which lives in soil and dust especially in
agricultural land, so if we have soft tissue injury and itscontaminated with
soil then we have to check for tetanus immunization.
This bacterium produces a type of neurotoxin which is called
tetanospasmin it affects the muscles and causes spam of the muscles.
Tetanus is dangerous and its mortality is from 1060 %.
**signs of tetanus infection:
Massetric spasm: the jaw will become locked and this will lead totrismus.
Facial spasms: leads to sardonic smileraised eyebrows , eyes closed Spasm of the spinal muscles leading to arched back Laryngeal spasm which is more dangerous than the previous spasms,
leading to asphyxiation .
Autonomic dysfunction leads to dysrhythmias. Death after 10 days due to asphyxia, bronchopneumonia or autonomic
dysfunction.
3-When did the injury occur?
4-Where did the injury occur?5-How did it occur? A fall or push by another classmate or during a fight
or during traffic accident.
6-Was there a period of unconsciousness? And if so, How long?
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7-Have there been previous injuries to teeth? This is important becausefrequent injury to teeth will affect the prognosis of your treatment,
the more frequent injury the prognosis become less and also in
children it indicates child abuse, so keep this in mind.
8- Is there a disturbance in the bite? Its usually due to alveolar fracture. 9- Is there any reaction in teeth to cold and/or heat, sweet or sour
foods? Its usually indicates dentin exposure or pulp injury.
10-Is there spontaneous pain from the teeth? Indicates injury to PDL or
pulp involvement
11-Are the teeth tender to touch, or during eating? Then suspect luxation
injuries.
You have to gather all signs or symptoms and analyze them;
* If there is pain or reaction to thermal stimulant it means dentin or pulp
exposure.
* If there is disturbance in the bite it might be luxation or alveolar fracture.
* If there is nausea or vomiting or any neurological sign , it indicate the
cerebral involvement.
Clinical examination:
When the patient attends for treatment of dental trauma, the oral region isusually heavily contaminated, as we said, so how would you examine it?
The first step is to wash the patients face, by a piece of gauze and wet it
with normal saline then clean the wound or irrigate the wound in order to
remove the debris and the soil or sand or any particles inside the wound .
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If there is soft tissue wounds, a mild detergent should be used
A thorough examination of the injured area should include soft tissues and
hard tissues examination.
The use of standardized examination forms, so you dont forget what to ask
about and we do have this in the clinics.
Clinical examination steps:
1-Clean the patient wound.2-
Record clinical findings; extraorally and intraorally.
3-Soft tissue wounds4-Hard dental tissues.5-Mobility testing6-Percussion testing7-Sensibility testing (ethyl chloride, EPT)(you already know about them in endo.)
8-Radiographic examination
Extraoral examination:
You record any wound, do palpation of the facial skeleton; if there is any
fracture in the bone, you check the mandible in all excursions, to identify
any dislocation or fracture, then you palpate the TMJ looking for swellings or
clicking.
Intraoralexamination:
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You go through the soft tissues and the hard tissues. In the soft tissues
examination you remove all foreign bodies and record all the injuries and
watch for any hematoma, especially under the tongue.
In the hard tissue exam you clean the crowns of teeth and you examinethem for any pulp exposure, fractures, changes in color, etc..
Always examine all the teeth, sometimes there is an injury in the posterior
teeth were you didntnotice.
Examine the alveolus for any mobility of fragments, displacement,
disturbances in occlusion, and palpation of the alveolus.
A typical sign of the alveolar fracture is movement of adjacent teeth when
the mobility of a single tooth is tested; so when you put your finger on one
tooth and test the mobility and you find that a whole group of teeth is
moving with it, which mean that we have alveolar fracture.
Page 16,17,18: this is an example of history and examination forms.
Page19-22: this is what we have in the pedo. Clinic in JUST.
In these forms, we record the patients name, date of birth, file number,
address, and referral source- if someone referred him to us. History of the
injury, depending on how did it occurred, and if there is any previous injury,
etc.. then we record the clinical examination.
Slide 41: this table were you indicate which teeth have been injured and all
details of the examination; the mobility the tenderness to percussion, andthe sensibility testing, then the radiographic findings, sometimes you can
draw the injury if there is fracture, and the radiographic report- after you
take the x-rays you write the report; if there is root fracture, root resorption,
PDL involvement.
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Page 22, this is the table where you write your diagnosis and treatment
planning;
*the diagnosis will be crown fracture involving the enamel and dentin.
*The restorative treatment plan: cover the dentin with liner and build up the
tooth with composite resin,
*pulp therapy is not needed for that,
*splinting, is not needed if there is no luxation.
*Follow-up plan: you have to see the patient after 2 weeks from now, then 1
month, then 3 months, then 6 months, every year for the next 5 years.
If the pulp is exposed you have to do cvek pulputomy and then build up the
tooth , if there is luxation injury I need to splint the tooth for a week, or over
10 days, or over 3 weeks, according to the type of the luxation.
MOBILITY TEST:
Should determine the extent of the losing , especially axially, and you have
learned the mobility test and the degree of the mobility(0,1,2,3)
- 0 = no loosening- 1= horizontal loosening =< 1mm- 2= horizontal loosening> 1mm- 3= horizontal and axial loosening.
Sometimes 0 mobility could mean ankylosis, so you have to lessen to the
percussion tone, the metallic sound indicate the ankylosis.
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While performing the mobility on the tooth you dont have to be harsh on
the tooth, you put your finger against finger or other instrument and you
push gently to test.
The same thing with the percussion it should be gentle, if the tooth istender to percussion, this may indicate an injury to the PDL, and if the
percussion tone yields high, metallic sound it means the tooth is ankylosed.
A high, metallic tone implies that the tooth is looked into bone- ankylosed.
Page 25: this is the percussion testing.
PULPAL SENSIBILITY TEST:
We always perform the pulpal sensibility testing even if the response is not
reliable. Generally speaking pulp testing is not very reliable, but it does give
us some indication about the pulp status. So we do them at the beginning ,
and we record whatever we get and we repeat it after each review, to
compare the status of the pulp at the beginning and later.
So it yields information about the neurovascular supply to the pulp of
involved teeth.
Response at the time of injury provides a baseline value for comparison at
later follow-up examinations.
Sensibility testing in the primary dentition may yield inconclusive
information, so we dont perform it.
Note that teeth with incomplete root formation dont respond consistently
to testing compared to teeth with complete root formation, because the
pulp system wasntcomplete.
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Technique of the vitality testing:
1-mechanical stimulation, by scratching dentin2-Thermal test: heated gutta percha, cold CO2, ethyl chloride.3-Electric tests: EPT4-Laser Doppler flowmetry: not found in the clinics. Its a machine works
by the Dopplers effect.
******* ******** ******* ******
1-Mechanical testing:For example: imagine that we have crown with dentin-pulp exposed then
sensibility can be tested by scraping with a dental probe, but if the pulp is
exposed never put the probe in the pulp because you will contaminate it
2-Thermal tests:Its the most reliable, it includes: heated gutta percha, ethyl chloride, CO2
snow.
3-Electric tests4-Laser Doppler flowmetry: not found in our clinics.
Radiographic examination:
We do a series of x-rays, we do extraoral and intraoral x-rays depending on
the situation, and sometimes you do more than one x-rays of the same type.
Types of radiographs available:
Steep maxillary occlussal film: we do it in alveolar fractures, lateral orextrusive luxation, and in mid-apical 1/3 root fracture.
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Pediatric maxillary occlusograph: in size 1 periapical film, in childrenused as maxillary occlussal, its big enough for a child.
Bisecting angle periapicals Lateral maxillary RG: the same as the maxillary occlussal but we put it
here laterally. Especially in case of intrusive or lateral luxation.
OPG, sometimes valid. Submentovertx Chest x-ray: if the child inhales a tooth or fragment. Soft tissue radiograph : taken when there is a crown fracture and the
lip injured, sometimes the fragment get impeded within the lip, so we
need to do soft tissue x-ray to the lip to locate them. The exposure
should be 25% of the normal exposure time.
Page 30: example of soft tissue radiograph; with fragment impeded in the
lip, this fragment can be tooth fragment or dust or sand or glass(especially in
road terrific accident.
In the radiographic exam you have to look for:
Fractures in crowns, roots, socket, bone.Any foreign body embedded in tissue.Displaced teeth from socketPDL width.Root development; if it complete or not, because this will tell us what
to do regarding pulp therapy, it tell also if the tooth is mature or
immature.
Size of pulp chamber Involvement of the permanent tooth bud.Signs of peri-apical resorption or pathosis.
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PHOTOS:
Offer exact documentation of the extent of injury, it can be used in
treatment planning, may be required for legal claims, important in clinical
research.
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3rd
Treatment planning:
We aim to restore the pulp, PDL and final tooth structure. It must consider
the following:
1-Restorative treatment.2-Pulp therapy3-Splinting4-Follow-up plan.
Treatment priorities of dental trauma, which injury we want to approach
immediately? And which can be delayed?
1-Acute approach: Tooth avulsion, you have to put the avulsed tooth- immediately
to its socket.
Alveolar fracture Extrusion, lateral luxation, roots fracture.
2-Subacute approach: Intrution, concussion, subluxation, crown fracture with pulp
exposure.
Primary teeth.3-Delayed treatment:
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Crown fractures without pulp exposure, and even its delayed youdont have to forget about it, but if you are in an emergency room,
and the patient has skeletal fracture and loss of consciousness and
other medical problems, then you can wait a week or so to treat
this fracture.
Follow- up:
You need to see your patient after 1 week in case of avulsion or after 3weeks in other cases
1 month3 months6 months1 year, for next 5 years.
The end
Note: you have to read the slides for extra information.
Done by:ALAA ALSMADI
(): 063063063063
063()() : : .:, ,
,, ,,.: .