Cases reported "Tooth Ankylosis"

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1/10. Splinting of traumatized teeth with a new device: TTS (titanium Trauma Splint).

    Displacement injuries of permanent teeth are an increasing emergency in the dental office. Children and adolescents are particularly prone to dental trauma due to participation in risky activities. Repositioning or replantation with subsequent stabilization by a dental splint is the standard of care for most displaced or avulsed permanent teeth. Non-rigid fixation allowing physiologic tooth mobility has been shown to be desirable for periodontal healing. A flexible splint of short duration appears to reduce the risk of dentoalveolar ankylosis or external replacement resorption. Different splinting techniques are currently recommended for stabilization of repositioned or replanted teeth, including a wire-composite splint, an orthodontic bracket splint or a resin splint. Each splinting option has its specific advantages and shortcomings. This paper describes a new splinting technique which offers improved comfort and handling to the patient and dentist alike.
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ranking = 1
keywords = alveolar
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2/10. Moving an ankylosed central incisor using orthodontics, surgery and distraction osteogenesis.

    When a dentist replants an avulsed tooth, the repair process sometimes results in the cementum of the root and the alveolar bone fusing together, with the replanted tooth becoming ankylosed. When this occurs, the usual process of tooth movement with bone deposition and bone resorption at the periodontium cannot function. If dental ankylosis occurs in the maxillary incisor of a growing child, the ankylosed tooth also cannot move vertically with the subsequent vertical growth of the alveolar process. This results in the ankylosed tooth leaving the plane of occlusion and often becoming esthetically objectionable. This report describes a 12-year-old female with a central incisor that was replanted 5 years earlier, became ankylosed, and left the occlusal plane following subsequent normal vertical growth of the alveolar process. When growth was judged near completion, the tooth was moved back to the occlusal plane using a combination of orthodontics, surgical block osteotomy, and distraction osteogenesis to reposition the tooth at the proper vertical position in the arch. This approach had the advantage of bringing both the incisal edge and the gingival margin of the clinical crown to the proper height in the arch relative to their antimeres. Previous treatment procedures for ankylosed teeth have often involved the extraction of the affected tooth. When this is done, a vertical defect in the alveolar process results that often requires additional bone surgery to reconstruct the vertical height of the alveolar process. If the tooth is then replaced, the replacement tooth must reach from the final occlusal plane to the deficient ridge. This results in an excessively long clinical crown with a gingival height that does not match the adjacent teeth.
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ranking = 462.32428485171
keywords = alveolar process, alveolar, ridge, process
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3/10. Hypodontia, ankylosis and infraocclusion: report of a case restored with a fibre-reinforced ceromeric bridge.

    Retained primary molars without permanent successors often undergo progressive infra-occlusion, without predictable exfoliation. Early prophylactic removal, after assessment of root resorption and adjacent periodontal support loss as well as age of onset, is often indicated. This article describes the joint orthodontic-restorative care of such a case and describes an alternative method of restoration using a fibre-reinforced ceromeric bridge. As well as a conservative preparation and good aesthetics, an overlay restoration provided a fully functional occlusion.
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ranking = 1.30544184172
keywords = ridge
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4/10. Alveolar distraction osteogenesis: a case report involving ankylosed maxillary central incisors.

    Restorative dentistry, for the optimal esthetic and functional result, at times requires innovation, exacting techniques, and employment of various treatment modalities. A case has been presented here involving a large esthetic defect in the maxillary anterior. Traditional methods of restoration may have been successful but alveolar distraction osteogenesis was determined to be the treatment of choice due to time, predictability, lack of invasiveness, and cost. It is a relatively new surgical procedure that has many applications to restore esthetic defects, ridge augmentation, and large craniofacial abnormalities. movement of osseous sections can be made in a vertical, labial, or lingual direction. When treatment planning restorative dentistry with vertical hard and soft tissue deficiencies, alveolar distraction osteogenesis can be considered to achieve optimal esthetics and a more ideal crown-to-root ratio. Further information can be obtained from any oral surgeon, orthodontist, or from the internet. Dr. Martin chin, a maxillofacial surgeon from san francisco, has done much of the clinical work regarding distraction procedures on humans and continues to be an innovator in craniofacial distraction osteogenesis. His work can be found on the internet at www.distraction.net; other interesting Web sites include www.klsmartin.com/distract.dir/indexdistract.html and www.seattle-implants.com/articles/distost.htm.
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ranking = 2.261088368344
keywords = alveolar, ridge
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5/10. Orthodontic fine adjustment after vertical callus distraction of an ankylosed incisor using the floating bone concept.

    The outcome of vertical callus distraction of a segment of tooth-supporting alveolar process might be functionally and esthetically unsatisfactory because of the unidirectional impact of intraoral distraction devices. In this case report, we describe how, with a shortened consolidation phase and application of the floating bone effect, the tooth-supporting osteotomy segment can be successfully aligned 3 dimensionally. We applied orthodontic force systems that went beyond the unidirectional vector preset by the mechanical properties of the distraction device.
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ranking = 115.2654120757
keywords = alveolar process, alveolar, process
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6/10. A customized distraction device for alveolar ridge augmentation and alignment of ankylosed teeth.

    The purpose of this study was to develop an extraosseous, tooth-supported miniature intraoral device that could produce prosthetically driven bone distraction of small atrophic alveolar ridge segments. Extraosseous distraction requires that the distraction device be anchored to a dental implant previously placed into the ridge according to its anatomic axis. A distractor can also correct the position of implants placed in young patients before skeletal growth is completed. Similarly, it allows the alignment of ankylosed teeth not treatable by orthodontics. The device is made of (1) an engine consisting of an orthodontic micrometric screw; (2) a joint between the implant and the engine, ie, the ball attachment/o-ring system; and (3) an anchorage system to the oral cavity provided by an orthodontic appliance and a mini-implant for possible additional support. Surgery involves an osteotomy of the atrophic alveolar ridge segment, incorporating the implant, from the basal bone; afterward the device can be applied and distraction of the segment can be carried out. Distraction was successfully performed in 3 clinical cases: 2 bone-implant segments and 1 bone-ankylosed tooth segment. All cases were clinically uneventful. This mini-device for osteogenic distraction of small atrophic ridge segments can provide for accurate and precise ridge augmentation, as is required for ideal prosthetic rehabilitation.
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ranking = 8.3497953150961
keywords = alveolar, ridge
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7/10. Case report: severe infraocclusion ankylosis occurring in siblings.

    AIM: This was to report a rare case of strong familiar tendency of ankylosis of maxillary second primary molars. CASE REPORT: Three Caucasian children, male twins of 8.5 years and a sister of 10 years, were diagnosed as having severely infraccluded maxillary second primary molars with underlying second premolars. In all three cases, the early extraction of the infraoccluded molars and an active treatment with cervical extraoral traction allowed the physiologic eruption of second premolars. Follow-up showed that normal vertical relationship and bone height had been obtained. CONCLUSION: early diagnosis, as well as appropriate treatment and careful follow-up are very important in the presence of severe infraocclusion, when the marginal ridge of affected primary teeth is at or below gingival level.
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ranking = 0.26108836834401
keywords = ridge
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8/10. Treatment of an ankylosed central incisor by single tooth dento-osseous osteotomy and a simple distraction device.

    When teeth are replanted after being avulsed, the repair process sometimes results in ankylosis. In a growing child, the ankylosed tooth fails to move along with the remaining alveolar process during vertical growth, resulting in a tooth that gradually appears more and more impacted and requires several reconstructive procedures to correct. Ankylosed teeth can, however, serve as anchorage for orthodontic correction of a malocclusion and as a point of force application for a dentoalveolar segment during alveolar distraction osteogenesis. This case report describes the treatment of a 13-year-old girl whose maxillary left central incisor had been avulsed and replanted 5 years earlier. The tooth had become ankylosed, and it was used to provide "free anchorage" during distalization of the maxillary dentition. The underdeveloped alveolar process adjacent to the ankylosed tooth was reconstructed by dento-osseous segment distraction osteogenesis, by using the ankylosed tooth as the point of force application.
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ranking = 232.53159824168
keywords = alveolar process, alveolar, process
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9/10. Two patterns of histologic healing in an intrabony defect following treatment with enamel matrix derivative: a human case report.

    Human histologic evidence of periodontal regeneration following treatment of intrabony defects with enamel matrix derivative has yielded inconsistent results in recent case reports. A 46-year-old woman presenting one deep intrabony defect at the distal root of a mandibular first molar scheduled for extraction was selected for enamel matrix derivative therapy. During surgery, a notch was placed at the most apical level of calculus on the experimental root. Nine months postsurgery, a block section including the distal root and surrounding periodontal tissues was obtained and processed in a mesiodistal plane. Histologic analysis demonstrated two different patterns of healing along the proximal and furcal surfaces. regeneration with new cellular cementum, bone, and periodontal ligament with functional fiber orientation was observed on the distal aspect of the root, whereas the furcal surface healed through ankylosis. This report underlines the biologic variability in wound healing following enamel matrix derivative therapy in periodontal intrabony defects and within the same defect. Host-specific intrinsic and/or extrinsic factors accounting for this variability remain to be investigated.
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ranking = 0.00077409029268331
keywords = process
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10/10. Infraclusion of lower primary molar with other familial dental anomalies: report of case.

    Impaction of a primary tooth is a rare occurrence compared to impaction of a permanent tooth. Impaction should be differentiated from reimpaction, a condition in which an erupted tooth loses its apical movement and impaired development of the alveolar bone surrounding the tooth occurs. In dental ankylosis, the height of the alveolar process stops in the affected area, the adjoining teeth continue to move occlusally, and neighboring teeth drift. The author discusses the uncertain etiology of reimpaction. The history of a three-year-old patient is presented.
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ranking = 116.2654120757
keywords = alveolar process, alveolar, process
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