Title: Pulp Disease
1 2Pulpitis
- Inflammation of the pulp from any cause.
3Unique Features of Pulpitis
- Rigid dentin walls confines inflammation
- Inflammation leads to increased intrapulpal
pressure and secondary compression of venous
return - Strangulation of the arterial inflow can lead to
necrosis of the pulp
4Types of Noxious Stimuli that Cause Pulpitis
- Mechanical damage. Accidents, iatrogenic injury,
attrition, abrasion and barometric injury - Thermal injury. Transmitted through metallic
restorations, cavity preparation, polishing
exothermic reactions of dental materials - Chemical irritation. Erosion or use of acidic
dental materials - Bacterial effects. Toxins associated with
extension of caries or via anachoresis
5Classification of Pulpitis
- Acute or chronic
- Subtotal or total
- Infected or sterile
- Reversible or irreversible
6Clinical Characteristics of Reversible Pulpitis
- Sudden, mild-to-moderate pain on exposure to
extremes in temperature usually most dramatic to
cold stimuli. - Sweet or sour foods or beverages also may cause
pain. - Pain does not occur without stimulus and subsides
rapidly when removed. - Tooth responds at lower threshold to electrical
stimulation mobility and sensitivity to
percussion absent.
7Clinical Characteristics of Irreversible Pulpitis
- Sharp, severe pain upon thermal stimulation that
continues after stimulus removed. - Cold is especially uncomfortable although heat,
sweet or acids can elicit pain. Later heat
intensifies and cold relieves pain. - Pain can be spontaneous, continuous and
exacerbated when lying down. - Early response at low then later at higher
threshold to electrical stimulation or not at
all. - Pain localized early then more diffuse.
- Pain becomes throbbing and keeps the patient
awake at night.
8Histopathology of Pulpitis
Irreversible chronic pulpitis with necrosis of
pulp
abscess
?
Irreversible chronic pulpitis with necrosis of
pulp
Acute reversible pulpitis (hyperemia)
Closed irreversible chronic pulpitis with
abscess in pulp horn
Acute pulpitis
9 Histopathology of Pulpitis
Acute pulpitis with degeneration of odontoblasts
Chronic pulpitis with degeneration of
odontoblasts
Acute pulpitis due to pulp exposure with abscess
formation
10Chronic Hyperplastic PulpitisPulp Polyp
- Uncommon form of pulpitis in which an
inflammatory hyperplasia (granulation tissue)
extrudes to fill a large cavity in the crown - Usually seen in children or young adults
- Deciduous or permanent mandibular molar most
likely to be involved - Apex of affected permanent tooth often
incompletely formed
11Chronic Hyperplastic Pulpitis (Pulp Polyp)
12Secondary DentinPhysiologic Secondary Dentin
- Dentin formed after the completion of the tooth
regular, organized tubular structure - Slow, gradual normal (physiologic) process that
increases after age 35-40 and leads to smaller
pulp chambers and root canals - Proceeds from crown down through root canals
pulpal floor of posterior teeth and east on
lateral walls - More advanced in males associated with
arthritis, gout, renal stones, gallstones,
atherosclerosis, hypertension - Age estimation, reduced sensitivity, caries
resistance and protection of pulp from trauma
13 Secondary Dentin
- Formation of secondary dentin in response to
advancing caries
14Localized Secondary DentinSecondary Reparative
Dentin Irregular or Tertiary Dentin
- Laid down in areas of focal injury or insult
- Haphazardly organized irregular or disorganized
tubules - Significant traumatic injury can lead to
accelerated early pulp obliteration termed
calcific metamorphosis (yellow crown) - Can occur in response to
- Attrition
- Fracture
- Erosion
- Abrasion
- Caries
- Periodontal disease
- Mechanical injury from dental procedures
- Irritation from dental materials
15Pulpal Calcifications
- Three types
- Denticles Epithelial remnants thought to induce
odontoblastic differentiation (epitheliomesenchyma
l interaction) - Pulp stones Nidus of pulp tissue seeds the
formation of a concentric stone - Diffuse linear calcifications Fine, fibrillar,
irregular calcifications that parallel pulp
vasculature increases with age
16Pulp Calcifications
?
Diffuse linear calcifications
Calcific metamorphosis
Pulp stone
17Significance of Pulpal Calcifications
- Estimated to occur in from 8-90
- Only 20 can be seen radiographically (denticles
pulp stones can be seen but not diffuse linear
calcifications) - Typically of little clinical significance may be
a consideration in RCT - Can be associated with
- Dentin dysplasia II
- Pulp dysplasia
- Tumoral calcinosis
- Calcinosis universalis
- Ehler-Danlos syndromes