Crown fractures in the permanent dentition: pulpal and restorative considerations
Autor: | Steven, Olsburgh, Thalia, Jacoby, Ivo, Krejci |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2002 |
Předmět: |
Dentin/injuries/ultrastructure
Dentin Secondary Dental Enamel/injuries Composite Resins Dental Pulp Capping Tooth Fractures Dentin-Bonding Agents/chemistry stomatognathic system Secondary/physiopathology Tooth Root/injuries Dental Pulp Exposure/etiology/therapy Humans Dental Pulp Exposure Tooth Root Composite Resins/chemistry Dental Enamel Dental Restoration Permanent Dental Pulp Tooth Crown Crown Lengthening Tooth Crown/injuries Dental Bonding Prognosis ddc:617.6 Dental Pulp/injuries/physiopathology Permanent/classification stomatognathic diseases Dental Restoration Tooth Fractures/classification/physiopathology/therapy Treatment Outcome Dentin-Bonding Agents Dentin Pulpotomy |
Zdroj: | Dental Traumatology, Vol. 18, No 3 (2002) pp. 103-15 |
ISSN: | 1600-4469 |
Popis: | Crown fractures account for the highest percentage of all traumatic injuries in the permanent dentition. This review paper will discuss the different types of crown fracture, from the uncomplicated to complicated, including crown-root fractures. It will focus on two different aspects: the pulp, with an attempt to correlate epidemiological, experimental, histopathological and clinical studies, so that the clinician can better understand the underlying processes accounting for success or failure to maintain pulp vitality. Also, we will consider the restoration: knowledge about bonding to dentin and new material is evolving extremely quickly making it difficult for the clinician to keep up with the developments. If handled properly, prognosis of the pulp, after traumatic crown fracture, is good. Prognosis of the restoration has also improved considerably over the last few years, and it appears that this trend will continue in the future. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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