Title: Lecturer: as. Yavors
1Lecturer as. Yavorska-Skrabut I.M.Therapeutic
dentistry department
- Un-carious defects of teeth. Classification
after Patrikeev. Pathomorphology, clinic and
diagnostics of defects which are developed before
and after cut of teeth. Treatment.
2- Environmental Alterations of Teeth
- Developmental Alterations of Teeth
3ENVIRONMENTAL ALTERATIONS OF TEETH
- Developmental tooth defects
- Turners tooth
- Hypoplasia caused by antineoplastic therapy
- Fluorosis
- Syphilitic hypoplasia
- Postdevelopmental structure loss
- Tooth wear
- Internal and external resorption
- Discolorations of teeth
- Intrinsic stains
- Extrinsic stains
- Localized disturbances in eruption
- Primary impaction
- Ankylosis
4Enamel development
- Three stages1. Matrix formation protein laid
down - 2. Mineralization minerals deposition,
majority of original prot. removed-- diffuse,
opaque white, soft enamel - 3. Maturation final mineralization--
translucent, hard enamel - Amelogenesis imperfecta
- Enamel hypoplasia
5Enamel development
- No remodeling after initial formation
- Timing of ameloblastic damage has a great impact
on location appearance of the defect - Development of crown from 14th week of
gestation to 12 months of age in deciduous
dentition 6 months to 15 y/o in permanent
dentition - Neonatal ring on deciduous enamel and deposition
with a rate of 0.023mm/day
6Factors associated with enamel defects
See Box 2-2
- Systemic-
- 1. Birth-related trauma premature birth
- 2. Chemicals antineoplastic C/T, fluoride,
tetracycline - 3. Chromosomal abnormalities trisomy 21
- 4. Infections chicken pox, CMV, syphilis
- 5. Inherited diseases Vit.D-dependent rickets
- 6. Malnutrition Vit. A deficiency
- 7. Metabolic disorders hypoparathyroidism,
maternal diabetes - 8. Neurologic disorders cerebral palsy
7Factors associated with enamel defects
See Box 2-2
- Local-
- 1.Local acute mechanical trauma
- 2. Electric burn
- 3. Irradiation
- 4. Local infection periapical inflammatory
disease
8Clinical and Radiographic Features
- Environmental enamel defects
- 1.Hypoplasia pits, grooves or large area of
missing enamel - 2. Diffuse opacities variation in translucency,
normal thickness, white opacity without clear
boundary - 3. Demarcated opacities increased opacity, a
sharp boundary with adjacent normal enamel,
normal thickness
9Turners hypoplasia, Turners tooth
- Permanent teeth
- Periapical inflammatory disease of the overlying
deciduous tooth, less frequently in anterior
teeth - Traumatic injury- not rare
- -45 children sustain injury to their
deciduous teeth, 23 permanent teeth
development disturbed
Turners hypoplasia secondary to previous trauma
10Turners teeth
11Hypoplasia caused by antineoplastic therapy
- Under 12 y/o, esp. under 5y/o
- Age at treatment, forms of therapy
- Chemotherapy-
- Less alteration than radiation
- Increased number of enamel hypoplasia and
discolorations, slight smaller tooth size,
radicular hypoplasia
12Radiotherapy-
- 0.72 Gy related to mild defects in enamel, dentin
Dose, radiation field
13- Developmental radicular hypoplasia and
microdontia caused by radiotherapy
14- Hypodontia, microdontia, radicular hypoplasia,
enamel hypoplasia, mandibular hypoplpasia,
reduced in vertical development of lower 1/3 of
face - Mandibular hypoplpasia may caused by Radiation
?impaired root development ?reduced alveolar bone
growth - Cranial radiation? altered pituitary gland
function? growth failed
15Dental fluorosis
- 1901, Dr. Frederick S. McKay Colorado brown
stain - 1909, Dr. F.L. Robertson in Bauxite, Arkansas
- 1930, H.V. Churchill high concentration of
fluoride of Bauxite(13.7ppm) and Colorado - 1931, Dr. H. Trendley Dean association between
fluoride, dental fluorosis and prevalence of
caries among children - 1.0 ppm reduced caries by 5070 and associated
with low and mild mottled enamel - 0.71.2 ppm water fluoridation was recommended
after 1962, currently 0.7ppm is recommended due
to increased dental fluorosis
16Dental fluorosis
- Retention of the amelogenin protein in enamel
structure? hypomineralized enamel? permanent
hypomaturation? increased surface and subsurface
porosity? alters light reflection and create
white, chalky area
17Dental fluorosis
- Critical period for clinical dental fluorosis is
the 2nd and 3rd year of life, dose dependent - Caries resistant
18- Syphilitic hypoplasia
- Congenital syphilis
- Hutchinsons incisors mulberry molars
19POSTDEVELOPMENTAL LOSS OF TOOTH STRUCTURE
- Begin from enamel surface (tooth wear)
- Attrition, abrasion, erosion, abfraction
- Begin from dentin, cemental surface internal or
external resorption
20Attrition
- Tooth to tooth contact during occlusion and
mastication, some are physiologic - Accelerated by poor quality or absent enamel,
premature contact, intraoral abrasives, erosion,
grinding habits - Incisal, occlusal and interproximal surfaces
21Abrasion
- Pathologic loss of tooth structure or restoration
secondary to the action of an external agent (ex.
Toothbrush, hair grips, toothpicks, chewing
tobacco, biting thread, dental flossing) - Toothbrush abrasion horizontal buccal cervical
notches of exposed radicular cementum and dentin
with smooth surface. - Greater on prominent teeth ( canines, premolars ,
and teeth adjacent to edentulous area) and side
of the arch opposite to the dominant hand - Demastication- when tooth wear is accelerated
by chewing an abrasive substance between opposing
teeth (both attrition and abrasion)
22Abrasion
23Abrasion
Improper use of hair grips
Long-term use of tobacco pipe
24Erosion
- Chemical process, exposure to acidic foods or
drinks, medications (chewable Vit. C, aspirin),
involuntary regurgitation (ex. esophagitis,
pregnancy), voluntary regurgitation (ex.
psychologic problems, bulimia) - Perimolysis- dental erosion from gastric
secretion - Facial surface of maxillary anteriors
affected-dietary source - Posterior teeth extensive loss of occlusal
surface, and palatal surface concave dentin
surrounded by an elevated enamel rim-
regurgitation of gastric secretion
25Erosion
concave dentin surrounded by an elevated enamel
rim
26Erosion
A bulimia patient
27Abfraction
- Repeated tooth flexure caused by occlusal
stresses (tensile stress) - ? concentrate at the cervical fulcrum
- ? may produce disruption in the chemical
bonds of enamel crystal - ?cracked enamel can be lost or removed by
erosion or abrasion - Wedge-shaped cervical defects, deep, narrow
V-shaped, not allow toothbrush to contact base
if the defect, often affect a single tooth - Almost exclusively on facial surface and more
often in bruxism, higher in mandibular dentition
28Abfraction
29Treatment and prognosis of tooth wear
- Resolve pain and sensitivity
- Identify the cause of tooth structure loss
- Protection
30INTERNAL EXTERNAL RESORPTION
- Internal resorption- by cells located in pulp,
rare - Follows injury to pulp tissues, physical trauma
or caries, continue as long as vital pulp
remains, may result in communication of the pulp
and PDL - External resorption- by cells in PDL, common
31Factors associated with external resorption
32Clinical and Radiographic Features
- Internal resorption-
- Inflammatory resorption- dentin replaced by
inflamed granulation tissue - Pink tooth of Mummery internal resorption
involved coronal pulp Balloonlike enlargement of
the canal - Replacement, or metaplastic absorption- pulpal
dentinal walls are replaced by bone or
cementum-like bone
33Clinical and Radiographic Features
- External resorption-
- Moth-eaten loss of tooth structure, less
well-defined and variation in density in
radiography - Most involved apical or midportions of root,
occasionally, begin from cervical (invasive
cervical resorption)
34Histopathologic Feature
- Increased cellularity, vascularity and
collagenization - Numerous multinucleated dentinoclasts
- Inflammatory cells infiltration
35Treatment and prognosis
- Internal resorption-
- Removal of all soft tissue from site of
resorption - Endodontic treatment before perforation in
internal resorption - Placement of calcium hydroxide paste for
remineralization - Surgical exposure and restoration
- Extraction
- External resorption-
- Identification and elimination the accelerating
factor
36ENVIRONMENTAL DISCOLORATION OF TEETH
- Extrinsic- surface accumulation of exogenous
pigment - Intrinsic-secondary to endogenous factors that
result in discoloration of underlying dentin
37Extrinsic stains
- Bacterial- Chromogenic bacteria, green,
black-brown, orange coloration Frequently in
children, labial surface of maxillary ant. in
gingival third - Iron- formation of ferric sulfide
- Tobacco
- Food and beverage- chlorophyll
- Gingival hemorrhage- Hb. breakdown to biliverdin
- Restorative material ex. Amalgam
- Medications- iron, iodine, silver nitrate,
chlorhexidine, stannous fluoride
38Intrinsic stains
- Amelogenesis imperfecta
- Dentinogenesis imperfecta
- Dental fluorosis
- Erythropoietic porphyria
- autosomatic recessive disorder of porphyrin
metabolism, increased synthesis and excretion of
porphyrins and their related precursors - Porphyrin deposition in teeth, reddish-brown
coloration, red fluorescence when exposed to a
Woods UV light - Present both in dentin and enamel in deciduous
teeth, but only dentin affected in permanent
teeth
39Erythropoietic porphyria
Hyperbilirubinemia
40Intrinsic stains
- Hyperbilirubinemia- bilirubin, breakdown product
of RBC, jaundance (yellow-green discoloration),
erythroblastosis fetalis, biliary atresia - Biliverdin deposition, green discoloration of
teeth (chlorodontia) - Ochronosis-alkaptonuria, blue-black discoloration
- Trauma- coronal discoloration, pulp necrosis
- Localized RBC breakdown
41Intrinsic stains
- Medications-
- Tetracycline (bright yellow to dark brown),
chlortetracycline (gray-brown), oxytetracycline
(yellow) , minocycline hydrochloride - Time of administration dose, duration
- Avoid from pregnancy up to 8 yrs of age
42Minocycline hydrochloride
- Tx for Acne
- Blue-gray from incisal 3/4, to dark green or
black in roots, also affect developed teeth - Skin, nail, sclera, conjunctiva, thyroid, bone
discoloration in susceptible individuals
Stained alveolar bone
43Treatment and prognosis
- Extrinsic stains- polishing
- Intrinsic stains- bleaching, bonded restoration,
crowns
44LOCALIZED DISTURBANCES IN ERUPTION
- PRIMARY IMPACTION- Teeth cease to eruption before
emergence - ANKYLOSIS -Cease of eruption after emergence and
anatomic fusion of tooth cementum or dentin with
alveolar bone
45Impaction
- 3rd molars, maxillary canines, mandibular
premolars, mandibular canines, maxillary
premolars, maxillary central incisors, maxillary
lateral incisors, and mandibular second molars
usually angulated or diverted - Factors associated with impaction
- Crowding and deficient maxillofacial development
- Overlying cysts or tumors
- Trauma
- Reconstructive surgery
- Thickened overlying bone or soft tissue
- A host of systemic disorders, diseases or
syndromes
46- Classification
- Partially erupted or full bony impaction
- according to angulation Mesioangular,
distoangular, vertical, horizontal or inverted - Eruption sequestrum
47Treatment and Prognosis
- Choice of treatment
- Long-term observation
- Orthodontically assisted eruption
- Transplantation
- Surgical removal
- The risks associated with nonintervention
- Crowding dentition
- Resorption and worsening of the periodontal
status of adjacent teeth - Development of pathologic conditions, ex
infections, cysts or tumors
48The risks associated with intervention
- Transient or permanent sensory loss
- Alveolitis
- Trismus
- Infection
- Fracture
- TMJ injury
- Periodontal injury
- Injury to adjacent teeth
49ANKYLOSIS
- Infraocclusion, secondary retention,
submergence, reimpaction, reinclusion
50ANKYLOSIS
- Clinical And Radiographic Features
- Pathogenesis is unknown, may be secondary to many
factors and result in PDL barrier deficiency. - May occur at any age, any tooth
- Most affect 89yr-old children and D , E , D , E
- PDL absent
- Occlusal, periodontal problems, impaction of the
underlying teeth - Treatment and Prognosis
- Variable extraction, orthodontics, segmental
osteotomy
51DEVELOPMENTAL ALTERATIONS OF TEETH
- SHAPE Gemination, Fusion, Concrescence
Accessary cusps - Dense in dente Ectopic Enamel
- Taurodontism
- Dilaceration Hypercementosis
- Supernumerary roots
- NUMBER Hypodontia
- Hyperdontia
- SIZE Microdontia Macrodontia
- STRUCTURE Amelogenesis imperfecta
Dentinogenesis imperfecta - Dentin dysplasia I II Regional
odontodysplasia
52Missing teeth
- 1.6-9.6 , excluding 3rd molars, female
predominance - Hypodontia missing one or more teeth
- Oligodontia missing 6 or more teeth
- Anodontia total missing
- 8 gt 5 gt 2 gt 1
- Deciduous mandibular incisors
- Gene mutation, ex PAX9, MSX1, AXIN2 gene,
He-Zhao deficiency, maps to chromosome 10q11.2 - AXIN2 mutation associated with the development
of adenomatous polyps of colon, and colorectal
carcinoma - Ectodermal dysplasia
- orofaciodigital syndrome
53Hypodontia
54Ectodermal dysplasia
Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
55Supernumerary teeth, hyperdontia
- Mesiodens
- 4th molar
- Paramolar
- Distomolar, distodens
- deciduous - lat. incisors
- 86 single supernumerary
- multiple impaction
- cleidocranial dysostosis
- Gardners syndrome
56Mesiodens
- The most common in supernumerary.
- Premaxillary area , usually between upper central
incisors - Cone-shaped crown short root
- One or two in number
57Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
58Cleidocranial dysostosis
- 1.Skull flat appearance, sutures remain open
- 2.Jaws underdeveloped, high narrow palate
- 3.Teeth prolonged retained deciduous teeth,
- delayed eruption of permanent
teeth - 4.Clavicles complete or partial absent
59Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
60Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
61Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
62Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
63(No Transcript)
64Gardners syndrome
- 1.multiple polyposis of the large intestine
- 2.osteoma of the bone
- 3.multiple epidermoid cysts or sebaceous cysts of
the skin - 4.desmoid tumors
- 5.impacted supernumerary permanent teeth
65Predeciduous dentition
- Neonatal teeth within 30 days
- Natal teeth newborns
- Most are prematurely erupted deciduous teeth
- Removal only if mobile and at risk of aspiration
66(No Transcript)
67Microdontia
- True
- 1.General -pituitary dwarfism
- 2. Single -peg lat., 3rd molar
- Relative microdontia
68Macrodontia
- True macrodontia
- 1. Generalized-pituitary gigantism
- 2. Localized- single, hemifacial hypertrophy
- Relative macrodontia small jaw, child
69(No Transcript)
70Gemination, Fusion, Concrescence
71Gemination
- single tooth germ division
- single root root canal 2 complete or
incomplete separated crowns - tooth no. normal
- twinning
72Fusion
- Union of 2 separate tooth germs
- Contact of tooth germ before calcified
- Confluent of the dentin
- Complete- form a single tooth
- Incomplete- after calcified begins
- Tooth no. less one
73Concrescence
- Fusion after root formation
- Cementun united
- Traumatic injury or crowding
- Pre-extraction x-ray check
74Talon cusp
- Eagles talon
- Lingual projection from the cingulum area of ant.
teeth - Most contain a pulp horn
- Both in deciduous permanent dentition
75Dens evaginatus
- ( central tubercle, occlusal tuberculated
premolar Leongs premolar evaginated odontome
occlusal enamel pearl ) - An accessory cusp or a globule of enamel on
central groove or buccal cusp of premolars or
molars unilateral or bilateral. - 15 in Asians, rare in whites
76Dens evaginatus
Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
77 78Dens in dente
- (Dens invaginatus Dilated composite odontome)
- Tooth within a tooth, incidence 5
- Invagination of the enamel organ into dental
papilla before calcification - Coronal type 3 types
- maxillary lateral incisors are common
79Dens invaginatus, coronal type II
80Dens invaginatus
- Radicular type
- Hertwigs sheath invagination
- Food deposition? caries ? pulp infection
- Restorated as soon as possible
81Taurodontism
- Bull-like teeth
- Bi- or trifurcation near the apex
- Pulp chamber greater apico-occlusal height and
no constriction at the cervical of the tooth
82Syndromes associated with taurodontism
83Hypercementosis
84Supernumerary roots
- Any tooth may develop accessary roots
- No tx required, but critical important in
endodontic procedure
85Dilaceration
- Angulation, sharp bend of root or crown
- Trauma during tooth is forming
- Pre-extraction x-ray check
86Amelogenesis imperfecta
- (Hereditary enamel dysplasia Hereditary brown
enamel Hereditary brown opalescent teeth) - Defects in--
- Formative stage?hypoplastic type ? defective
formation of matrix - Calcification stage ?hypocalified ? defective
mineralization of formed matrix - Maturation stage ? hypomaturation ? enamel
crystallites remain immature - Genes mutation AMELX, ENAM, MMP-20, KLK4, DLX3
87Amelogenesis imperfecta
881.Hypoplastic type
- Thin enamel with pitted, rough or smooth glossy
surface yellowish to brown - undersized, squared crown, lack of contact
- flat occlusal surface low cusps, attrition
89Hypoplastic type
Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
90Hypoplastic type
912.Hypomaturation
- normal thickness of enamel, but mottled surface
cloudy white, yellow or brown, opaque in color - softer than normal
- same density as dentin
92Hypomaturation type
Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
933.Hypocalcified type
- normal thickness of enamel, density less than
dentin - normal size shape when erupt, abrade or
fracture away rapidly - permeability increase, darkened stained
4.Hypomaturation-hypocalcified with
taurodontism
94Hypocalcified type
95Tricho-dento-osseous syndrome
Hypoplastic-Hypomaturation type
96Dentinogenesis imperfecta
- (Hereditary opalescent dentin)
- Classification of DI (Shields)
- Type I DI OI (osteogenesis imperfecta)
COL1A1, -
COL1A2 - Type II Isolated DI. (1/8000)
DSPP - Type III DI of the Brandywine type
DSPP - A racial isolate in Maryland,
- DI multiple pulp exposures in deciduous
teeth
97Osteosclerosis imperfecta
Blue sclera
M Greenwood, J G Meechan,General medicine and
surgery for dental practitioners Part 8
Musculoskeletal system. British Dental Journal
2003 (195) 243 - 248 ,
98Clinical features
- type I deciduous severe than permanent teeth
- type II equally affected
- type III both dentitions affected.
- Gray to brownish violet or yellowish brown color,
with translucent or opalescent hue. - Enamel lost early through fracture, esp. on the
incisal occlusal surface, and dentin attrition
rapidly. - Caries rate is not increased.
99Dentinogenesis imperfecta
100Dentinogenesis imperfecta
- Histology
- 1.pulp chamber obliterated with dentin
- 2.flatten D-E junction
- 3.atypical granular dentin, enlarged tubles,
poor calcification - water contents 50 above normal
101Radiographic features
- Partial or total obliteration of the pulp chamber
root canal by continued formation of dentin, in
both dentitions. - Short and blunted roots
- Normal cementum, PDL supporting bone
102Shell teeth
- Initial reported in the Brandywine population
- Normal thickness of enamel associated with
extremely thin dentin and dramatically enlarged
pulps (due to insufficent and deffective dentin
formation) - Short roots.
103Kaohsiung Medical University, Oral Pathology and
image Diagnosis Dept.
104Dentin dysplasia
- Hereditary, autosomal dominant. Normal enamel but
atypical dentin formation with abnormal pulp
morphology - Type I (radicular type) Rootless teeth
- Type II (coronal) DSPP (dentin
sialophosphoprotein) gene mutation
105Type I (radicular type)
- Radiographically
- deciduous teeth affected more severely, little or
no pulp, short or absent roots. - If disorganization late---normal pulp chambers,
with a large pulp stone. - periapical lesions (R-L) no obvious cause.
- Histologic features
- Normal coronal enamel dentin.
- In root tubular dentin and atypical osteodentin
surrounded with normal dentin --- appearance of
Lava flowing around boulders.
106Dentin dysplasia, type I
107 Type II (coronal)
- Normal root length in both dentitions.
- Primary dentition similar to DI
- bulbous crowns, cervical constriction
- thin roots , early obliterated pulp.
- Permanent teeth normal coloration, thistle
tube-shaped or flame-shaped pulp chamber with
pulp stones.
108Dentin dysplasia, type II (coronal)
109Dentin dysplasia
Lava flowing around boulders.
Large pulp stones
110Regional odontodysplasia
- (odontodysplasia odontogenic dysplasia
odontogenesis imperfecta ghost teeth) - One or several teeth in a localized area
- Maxi. gt Mand. both dentitions
- most in ant. area
- Delayed or total failure eruption
- Irregular appearance
- Defective mineralization
111- Radiographic features
- 1. Radiodensity ?, ghost appearance
- 2. Large pulp, thin enamel dentin
- Histologic features
- 1. Dentin?
- 2.Widening of the predentin layer,
- 3. Interglobular dentin and an irregular
tubular pattern of dentin ? - 4.Calcification of the reduced enamel epi.
112Odontogenic epithelium
Enameloid conglomerates
Regional odontodysplasia
113ENVIRONMENTAL ALTERATIONS OF TEETH
Summary
- Developmental tooth defects
- Turners tooth
- Hypoplasia caused by antineoplastic therapy
- Fluorosis
- Syphilitic hypoplasia
- Postdevelopmental structure loss
- Tooth wear
- Internal and external resorption
- Discolorations of teeth
- Intrinsic stains
- Extrinsic stains
- Localized disturbances in eruption
- Primary impaction
- Ankylosis
114DEVELOPMENTAL ALTERATIONS OF TEETH
Summary
- SHAPE Gemination, Fusion, Concrescence
Accessary cusps - Dense in dente Ectopic Enamel
- Taurodontism
- Dilaceration Hypercementosis
- Supernumerary roots
- NUMBER Hypodontia
- Hyperdontia
- SIZE Microdontia Macrodontia
- STRUCTURE Amelogenesis imperfecta
Dentinogenesis imperfecta - Dentin dysplasia I II Regional
odontodysplasia