Title: BREAD AND BUTTER ORAL SURGERY
1BREAD AND BUTTERORAL SURGERY
- FOR THE GENERAL PRACTIONER
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5KANSAS CITY CHIEFS ARROWHEAD STADIUM
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9METH MOUTH
10DENTISTRY
- The main duty of dentists today is to maintain
the dentition and the alveolus, thereby allowing
function relative to mastication, deglutition,
maintenance of facial form and cosmesis. - The most common infection seen in man is caries
and periodontal disease - The most common operations today involve surgery
in and about the dentoalveolus
11BASIC PRINCIPLES OF DENTOALVEOLAR SURGERY
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14TOPOGRAPHY
15TOPOGRAPHY
16TOPOGRAPHY
17TOPOGRAPHY
18TOPOGRAPHY
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20TOPOGRAPHY
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22RETROMOLARTRIANGLE
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24BSSRO good bone contact present despite
movement of distal segment compression of
segments should be limited to the site of best
contact to avoid torque rotation of the condyle
IAN
25LINGUAL NERVE
26CASE PRESENTATION
2739 yo AAM
- Lower (mand) premolar 21, nonrestorable with
caries at gingival line, acute pulpitis and
cellulitis - PMH benign, except patient is abusive of Etoh,
tobacco, and some street drugs - Meds none All NKDA
28CLINICAL CONCERNS
- Tooth fracture (coronal) down to bone level
- Relatively uncooperative patient
- Can profound anesthesia be produced
- Flap vs. no flap
- Friday afternoon at 415pm
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30THE INTRAORAL FLAP
- The incision is in soft tissue and should be
designed to allow access to the hard tissues - The base of the flap should be designed so the
base is wider than the margins of the flap - The flap should be wide enough to expose the
entire surgical site and to close over bone - Design of the flap incorporates vital structures
and protects these entities - Retraction
31FLAP TYPES
- Envelope flap
- Envelope flap with releasing incision
- Semilunar flap
- Palatal flap
32ENVELOPE FLAP
33ENVELOPE FLAP WITH RELEASE
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38SEMILUNAR FLAP
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40CASE PRESENTATION CONT
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50PEARLS TOOTH FX BELOW CRESTAL BONE
- Good anesthesia
- Good lighting
- Flap design,elevation,exposure
- Irrigation, airway protection
- Replacement of flap, suture selection
- Selection of analgesic, antibiotic?
- F/U and drain removal
51CASE PRESENTATION
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57MAXILLARY MOLAR
- Damage to adjacent teeth
- Sinus involvement
- Root fracture
- Multirooted tooth
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62THE T SPLIT
- Section roots split buccal from palatal
- Section the two buccal roots and remove
- Remove the palatal root
63MANDIBULAR MOLARS
- Anesthesia concerns
- Neurovascular bundle concerns
- Damage to adjacent teeth
- Injury to the TMJ articulation
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65SECTIONING TECHNIQUE- MANDIBULAR MOLARS
66TUBEROSITY REDUCTION
67BULBOUS TUBEROSITIES
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70PROSTHETICALLY FRIENDLY ARCH
71ODONTOGENIC CYST REMOVAL
72CASE PRESENTATION
- 56 yo AAM presents c/o pain and swelling times 3
months. - Area of interest located in the anterior mandible
- 24 and 25 with dilacerated roots
- Teeth are viable, mobile
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74CLINICAL CONCERNS
- Need for teeth removal pro. vs. con
- Flap design exposure, nerve concerns, cosmesis
- Need for endodontic therapy before or after oral
surgery - Pre-extirpative need for biopsy
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76SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF CYSTS
- Stepwise approach i.e. physical exam to include
inspect/palpate/auscultate - Aspirate with 18g
- If no aspirate, lesion may be a tumor and
incisional bx indicated. - If air, probable traumatic bone cyst.
- If fluidyellow vs opaque/cheesy vs blood
77CYST TREATMENT
- Elimination is the aim. May be accomplished by
decompression, marsupialization and enucleation - Decompression flap, aspirate, open into cyst,
maintain drainage over weeks to months. Difficult
secondary to hygiene problems and if inadequate
bx specimen, the lining will continue to
propogate.
78CYST THERAPY
18 GAUGE ASPIRATION
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80ENVELOPE FLAP
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82ASPIRATION
83BX OKC
84ALVEOLAR DEFECT
85CLOSURE
86FAILURE OF TOOTH ERUPTION
- THE ART AND SCIENCE
- OF IMPACTION REMOVAL
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88INCIDENCE OF IMPACTED TEETH
- Grover PS, Lorton L Triple O 1985 Looked
at 5000 army recruits - Very high incidence/frequency of impacted
teeth - 1st mandibular 3rd
- 2ndmaxillary 3rd
- 3rdmaxillary canine
- 4thmandibular premolars, then max.
premolars and max 2nd molars
89FREQUENCY OF IMPACTION
90IMPACTION FREQUENCY
- Impactions of first molars and incisors are
relatively uncommon - Impaction of permanent teeth is a relatively
common finding, the lack of eruption of a primary
tooth is apparently rare. When it occurs, it is
almost always a mandibular molar. Submerged
teeth are common in the primary dentition
91EMBRYOLOGY
- The mandibular 3rd molar tooth germ is visible
radiographically by age 9, and cusp
mineralization is completed by age 11. At age
11, the tooth is located within the anterior
border of the ramus with its occlusal surface
facing almost directly anteriorly
92EMBRYOLOGY
- Crown formation is usually complete by age 14,
and the roots are approximately 50 formed by age
16 years - Lenthening growth of the mandible occurs at the
expense of the anterior border of the ramus,
therefore the angulation of the crown becomes
more horizontal
93EMBRYOLOGY
- The roots are completely formed with an open
apex by age 18 years - By age 24, 95 of all third molars that will
erupt have completed their eruption - The change in orientation of the occlusal surface
from a straight anterior inclination to a
straight vertical inclination occurs primarily
during root formation
94IMPACTIONS-WHY? (1)
- Differential root growth between the mesial and
distal roots. Underdevelopment of the mesial
rootmesioangular impaction. Ovedevelopment of
the mesial rootdistoangular impaction.
Overdevelopment of the distal root for severe
mesioangular or horizontal impactions
95IMPACTIONS-WHY (2)
- Some teeth become impacted involves the relation
of the bony arch length to the sum of the
mesiodistal widths of the teeth in the arch
i.e.inadequate bony length will have a higher
proportion of impacted teeth
96IMPACTIONS-WHY (3)
- A final factor involved in the development of
impacted teeth is retarded maturation of the 3rd
molar - When dental development of the tooth lags
behind the skeletal growth and maturation of the
jaws, there is an increased incidence of
impactions. Impactions are more common in Class
II vs Class III skeletal relationships
97TOOTH IMPACTIONOR RETENTION
- Occurs at the population level with a frequency
of approximately 20
98EPIDEMIOLOGY
- CLASS I OCCL. 87 OF POPULATION
- CLASS II OCCL. 10 OF POPULATION
- CLASSIII OCCL. 2.5 OF POP.
99- Extraction of this 3rd molar reveals smooth
roots which shows where the follicle in-
serted into the completed roots
100- Posterior marginal cyst. Growth into the distal
area of the follicle is a result of the partial
retention of the tooth under the temporal ridge
of the ramus
101- Follicular cyst in a 60 year old on the rt 3rd
molar - The wall of the cyst surrounds the crown and
extends beyond the cementoenamel junction
102- This dentigerous cyst on this 45 year patient of
the left mand. 3rd molar occupies the total
height of the mandibular body. Note the
involvement of the roots of the 2nd molar.
103THE KISSING MOLAR IMPACTION
104FACTORS INFLUENCING ERUPTION DISTURBANCES
- Extraction of primary teeth
- Sequelae of caries in primary teeth
- Genetics
- Ethnic background- Chinese with 2.5X gt than
Caucasians
- Sex MgtF
- Body height chronological age skeletal age
- Endocrinologic disturbances
- Nutrition,socioeco-nomic factors
105OBSTRUCTION BY HARD AND SOFT TISSUES
- Eruption cyst
- Compact bone
- Supernumerary teeth
- Odontomas
- Odontogenic tumors central odontogenic fibroma,
AOT, ameloblastic fibroma,CEOT calcifying
odontogenic cyst, dentinoma, OKC, follicular cysts
106INDICATIONS FOR REMOVAL OF IMPACTIONS
- Pericornitis prevention or treatment
- Prevention of dental disease
- Orthodontic considerations
- Prevention of Odontogenic Cysts/Tumors
- Root resorption of adjacent teeth
- Teeth under a dental prosthesis
- Prevention of jaw fracture
- Unexplained pain
107PREVENTION OF JAW FRACTURE
- Halmos DR et al JOMS 62(9) 1076-81,2004 Sep
- Looked at 1,450 subjects and found a 2.8-fold
increase risk for angle fractures with the
presence of M3s. M3 position had an associated
variable risk for fracture but interestingly, the
deep impaction was not associated with an
increased risk for fx.
108REMOVAL CRITERIA
- I Dentitio difficilis and pericornitis
- II Small cysts
- III Possible source of infection
- IV Inadequate space
- V Caries/pulpitis
- VI Vague, undiagnosed pain
109PERICORNITIS AND SPREAD OF INFECTION
110The exposed partially erupted tooth
111DEEP NECK SPACE INFECTIONS
- Bacteria commonly involved in association with
pericornitis Peptostreptococcus Fusobacterium
Bacteroides(Prevetella or Porphyromonas) - 25-30 of Mand. 3rds removed due to this
112FASCIAL SPACES ABOVE THE HYOID BONE
113Progression of an odontogenic infection to a
Ludwigs angina
114DEEP SPACES ASSOCIATED WITH MANDIBULAR INFECTIONS
- Space of the body of the mandible
- Sublingual
- Submandibular
- Submental
- Ludwigs angina
- Masticator
- Lateral pharyngeal
- Retropharyngeal
- Pretracheal
- Carotid sheath
- Danger space-space 4
- Mediastinum
115CONTRAINDICATIONS FOR REMOVAL OF IMPACTED TEETH
- Extremes of age
- Compromised medical status
- Surgical damage to adjacent structures
116CLASSIFICATIONOF IMPACTIONS
- Pell GJ,Gregory GT
- Impacted mandibular third molars
- Dent Dig 193339330
117ANATOMIC SITUATION OF THE TOOTH
- The orientation of the great axis of the tooth
- The relationship of the tooth to the ramus of the
mandible - The depth of the impaction
118ORIENTATION OF AXIS
119RELATIONSHIP TO RAMUS
120- CL I Space between ramus and distal of 2nd molar
sufficient for eruption - CL II Space between ramus and distal aspect of
2nd molar less than mesiodistal diameter of 3rd
molar crown - CL III Temporal crest against distl of 2nd molar
121DEPTH OFIMPACTION
- Erupted
- Soft tissue impaction
- Partial bony impaction
- Full bony impaction
122TOOTH BUD
- Type 1 fully formed crown
- Cannot use elevator
- Rotation in crypt
123Impaction type 2
- Incomplete root development
- Follicular space
- Easy to remove
124Impaction type 3
- Completely formed roots
- Normal axial orientation
125IMPACTION
- Mesially tipped or
- horizontal
126IMPACTION
- Distally tipped
- Very difficult to remove
127IMPACTION
128Impaction
129MAXILLARY IMPACTIONS
130Impaction
- Mesioangular orientation
- Difficult removal
131Impaction
- Vertical impac.
- DIFFICULT!
132IMPACTION
- Distoangular
- Concept of
- dislodgement
133Multiple Impactions
134Impaction with supernumary
135INTERESTING ROOT FORMATION
136INSTRUMENTARIUM
137INSTRUMENTARIUM
138CRYER ELEVATORS
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140POTTS ELEVATOR
141CRANE PICK
142SCALPEL DESIGN
143SURGICAL TECHNIQUE
144MANDIBULAR 3RD MOLAR
145The lingual nerve may be at risk with scalpel
misadventure
146LINGUAL NERVE NEUROMA
147WRONG DIRECTION
148TECHNIQUE
- Envelope flap
- Vertical release is an option, however will
increase swelling and discomfort - Controlled force with elevation of a
full-thickness mucoperiosteal flap. Use your
finger to pull tissue taut. Palpate the external
ridge. EXPOSURE! - Ostectomy with high torque/non high speed
handpiece
149THE TOOTH IS MINE AND THE BONE IS THE PATIENTS
150Copious irrigation and place a throat pack.
151Root structure can fool you
152- Closure the neater you sew, the neater it grows
- Primary closure produces gt postop pain and
swelling is worse - Greater incidence of subperiosteal infec. At 30
days - Pasqualini D. et al International JOMS 34(1)
52-7, Jan 2005
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155 32 REMOVAL
156MAXILLARY IMPACTION TECHNIQUE
- Envelope flap with/without vertical release
- Flap is easy to tear
- Can be complicated with buccal fat pad extrusion
- Dislodgement into airway or infratemporal fossa
- EXPOSURE!
157- Sm max sinus
- Cn nasal cav
- Mb buccinator m
- BgB fat pad
The tuberosity extends the alveolar process of
the 2nd molar. Pterygomaxillary junction is
posterior limit
158Always place a large periosteal elevator
(Seldon/Minnesota) behind the impaction to
prevent dislodgement. Throat pack mandated.
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162COMPLICATION RATES
- Bui CH et al JOMS 61(12) 1379-89,2003 Dec.
- 583 pts. The overall complication rate was 4.6.
Increasing age, a positive medical history, and
the position of the M3 relative to the IAN were
associated with an increased risk for
complications. Most texts reveal a rate 10
163COMPLICATIONS
- Include swelling, pain, stiffness, bleeding
- Other complications include inferior alveolar
nerve dysfunction and fracture of thje mandible - The accepted rate of Infer alveolar and lingual
nerve injury is 3. As many as 45 of
compression injuries result in permanent
neurosensory abnormality
164NEUROPRAXIA
AXONOTMESIS
NEUROTMESIS
AXONOTMESIS
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167ALVEOLAR OSTEITIS
- The incidence of alveolar osteitis (dry socket)
varies between 20-25 - Pathogenesis related to clot breakdown
(fibrinolysis) by saliva , tissue agents, and
bacteria. Decreased bacterial load reduces the
incidence of dry socket by 50-75
168INFECTION RATES
- Incidence ranges from 1.7 to 2.7
- Of the above cited rate, 50 are the
subperiosteal type - Infection rates in the first week are
approximately 0.5-1. Do not use prophylactic
antibiotics as there is no indication.
169ADJUNCTIVE AIDS
- Resorbable suture
- Utilization of corticosteroids
- Tiwana PS et al JOMS 63(1)55-62, 2005 Jan.
Will not hamper recovery and will improve
health-related quality of life, nausea lt on POD
1, reduced recovery by 1 day - ANALGESIA
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171ASSESSMENT OF SEQUELAE
- Pain usually peaks 6-8 hours after 3rd molar
surgery, disappearing over the next week - Swelling reaches a maximum about 36 hours after
surgery - Trismus reaches a maximum 2-3 days, then slowly
resolves
- The severity of sequelae correlates with duration
of surgery - The tooth most likely to be involved with
pericornitis is the erupted vertically positioned
tooth - Good age for surgery is 17-20 years
172MAXILLARY SINUS
- First of the paranasal sinuses to begin devt.
Begins between day 65 and 70 of fetal devt - Can see on x-ray 4-5 months of age
- Growth is biphasic 1st period during 1st 3 years
of life. The 2nd phase at 7-18 years of age - Concept of pneumatization
173MAXILLARY SINUSANTRUM OF HIGHMORE
- First of paranasal sinuses to begin devt. Devt
begins between day 65 and 70 of fetal devt - Can visualize radiographically 4-5 months of age
- Biphasic growth1st period during 1st 3 years of
life 2nd period between 7-18 years of life - Pneumatization
174DRAINAGE
- The space under each turbinate or conchae is
designated as inferior, middle, superior meatus - The osteomeatal complex is a space within the
middle meatus into which the maxillary, anterior
ethmoid, and frontal sinuses drain. This OMC is
the site of impaired ventilation and drainage
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176ANATOMY
177MAXILLARY SINUS
- Largest of all paranasal sinuses
- Adult sinus dimensions 34mm AP 33mm in
height, 23 mm width - Baselateral nasal wall
- Apex extends laterally into zygomatic process
of maxilla - Rooffloor of orbit
- Floor formed by maxillary alveolus
178OSTEOMEATAL COMPLEX
179OSTEOMEATAL COMPLEX
180EXAMINATION
- CLINICAL manual palpation, symptomotology,
epiphora, transillumination
181PANAELIPSE VIEW-NORMAL
182PANELIPSE- Left antrum
183WATERS VIEW
184PERIAPICAL VIEW
185CAT SCAN
186CAT SCAN
187ORAL-ANTRAL COMMUNICATION
- A communication between the mouth and the sinus.
If gt than 3mm, anticipate surgical closure. If lt
than 3mm place gelfoam and have patient utilize
sinus precautions
188TREATMENT PRINCIPLES
- Place patient on appropriate Abos, antihistamines
and nasal spray. Instigate sinus precautions. - After 4-6weeks, perform closure with a
buccal/palatal/buccal fat pad technique. Use
vicryl or silk sutures. May have to utilize a
palatal splint. Abos/antihistamine/nasal spray
and sinus precautions
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191DEMONSTRATION OF COMMUNCATION
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198CLOSURE AT 10 DAYS
199CLOSURE AT 1 MONTH
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201ELEVATOR MISADVENTURE
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203GOIN TO KANSAS CITY