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The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma

External Cervical Resorption in maxillary canines with pulp vitality is frequently associated with dental trauma resulting from surgical procedures carried out to prepare the teeth for further orthodontic traction. Preparation procedures might surgically manipulate the cementoenamel junction or caus...

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Autores principales: Consolaro, Alberto, Cardoso, Mauricio de Almeida, de Almeida, Carolina Dornelas C. M., Souza, Ingrid Araújo Oliveira, Capelloza, Leopoldino
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dental Press International 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4347407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25628076
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/2176-9451.19.6.019-025.oin
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author Consolaro, Alberto
Cardoso, Mauricio de Almeida
de Almeida, Carolina Dornelas C. M.
Souza, Ingrid Araújo Oliveira
Capelloza, Leopoldino
author_facet Consolaro, Alberto
Cardoso, Mauricio de Almeida
de Almeida, Carolina Dornelas C. M.
Souza, Ingrid Araújo Oliveira
Capelloza, Leopoldino
author_sort Consolaro, Alberto
collection PubMed
description External Cervical Resorption in maxillary canines with pulp vitality is frequently associated with dental trauma resulting from surgical procedures carried out to prepare the teeth for further orthodontic traction. Preparation procedures might surgically manipulate the cementoenamel junction or cause luxation of teeth due to applying excessive force or movement tests beyond the tolerance limits of periodontal ligament and cervical tissue structures. Dentin exposure at the cementoenamel junction triggers External Cervical Resorption as a result of inflammation followed by antigen recognition of dentin proteins. External Cervical Resorption is painless, does not induce pulpitis and develops slowly. The lesion is generally associated with and covered by gingival soft tissues which disguise normal clinical aspects, thereby leading to late diagnosis when the process is near pulp threshold. Endodontic treatment is recommended only if surgical procedures are rendered necessary in the pulp space; otherwise, External Cervical Resorption should be treated by conservative means: protecting the dental pulp and restoring function and esthetics of teeth whose pulp will remain in normal conditions. Unfortunately, there is a lack of well-grounded research evincing how often External Cervical Resorption associated with canines subjected to orthodontic traction occurs.
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spelling pubmed-43474072015-03-03 The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma Consolaro, Alberto Cardoso, Mauricio de Almeida de Almeida, Carolina Dornelas C. M. Souza, Ingrid Araújo Oliveira Capelloza, Leopoldino Dental Press J Orthod Orthodontic Insight External Cervical Resorption in maxillary canines with pulp vitality is frequently associated with dental trauma resulting from surgical procedures carried out to prepare the teeth for further orthodontic traction. Preparation procedures might surgically manipulate the cementoenamel junction or cause luxation of teeth due to applying excessive force or movement tests beyond the tolerance limits of periodontal ligament and cervical tissue structures. Dentin exposure at the cementoenamel junction triggers External Cervical Resorption as a result of inflammation followed by antigen recognition of dentin proteins. External Cervical Resorption is painless, does not induce pulpitis and develops slowly. The lesion is generally associated with and covered by gingival soft tissues which disguise normal clinical aspects, thereby leading to late diagnosis when the process is near pulp threshold. Endodontic treatment is recommended only if surgical procedures are rendered necessary in the pulp space; otherwise, External Cervical Resorption should be treated by conservative means: protecting the dental pulp and restoring function and esthetics of teeth whose pulp will remain in normal conditions. Unfortunately, there is a lack of well-grounded research evincing how often External Cervical Resorption associated with canines subjected to orthodontic traction occurs. Dental Press International 2014 /pmc/articles/PMC4347407/ /pubmed/25628076 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/2176-9451.19.6.019-025.oin Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Orthodontic Insight
Consolaro, Alberto
Cardoso, Mauricio de Almeida
de Almeida, Carolina Dornelas C. M.
Souza, Ingrid Araújo Oliveira
Capelloza, Leopoldino
The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title_full The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title_fullStr The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title_full_unstemmed The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title_short The clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
title_sort clinical meaning of external cervical resorption in maxillary canine: transoperative dental trauma
topic Orthodontic Insight
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4347407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25628076
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/2176-9451.19.6.019-025.oin
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