- Tooth 36 - pulpless, infected root canal system with chronic apical periodontitis - due to caries and restoration breakdown
- Tooth 45 - acute irreversible pulpitis with primary acute apical periodontitis - due to caries and a crack
- Tooth 21 - root-filled and infected root canal system with a chronic apical abscess - due to restoration breakdown and a crack
- Tooth 16 - pulpless, infected root canal system with secondary acute apical periodontitis - due to caries and restoration breakdown
- Tooth 22 - necrotic and infected pulp with a primary acute apical abscess - due to an uncomplicated crown fracture
- Tooth 14 - chronic reversible pulpitis with pulp canal calcification and clinically normal periapical tissues - due to caries
Use the textbook chapter and this along with the above to come up with a bunch of long answers, the reasoning and what the right course of action is
14 Conditions:
- Clinically Normal Periapical Tissues
- Apical Periodontitis
- Acute Primary Secondary
- Chronic Radiolucency Condensing Osteitis
- Foreign body reaction
- Infections
- Abscess
- Acute Primary Secondary
- Chronic
- Cellulitis
- Extra-radicular infection
- Abscess
- Cysts Pocket True
- Periapical Scar
- Clinically normal pulp
- Reversible pulpitis → Acute → Chronic
- Irreversible pulpitis → Acute → Chronic → Symptomatic → Asymptomatic
- Pulp necrobiosis
- Pulp necrosis → Infected → No sign of Infection
- Pulpless and infected root canal system
- Previous Endodontic Treatment → Infected RCS → No signs of infection
- Pulp atrophy
- Pulp canal calcification
- Pulp hyperplasia
- Internal resorption → Surface → Inflammatory → Replacement