Cases reported "Toothache"

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1/7. Reversible and irreversible painful pulpitides: diagnosis and treatment.

    The foregoing clinical evidence indicates that when pain is severe, or when mild to moderate pain is present with a previous history of pain in the aching tooth, with or without periapical radiolucency, the tooth is in the IRPP category. Treatment dictates endodontic therapy or extraction. On the other hand, when clinical evidence indicates that the pain is mild or moderate with no previous history of pain, normal pulp vitality, and there is no positive percussion sign, the pulp is in the RPP category. Treatment dictates indirect or direct pulp capping in teeth with or without periapical radiolucency. The success rate favours teeth with no periapical radiolucency, 98%; in teeth with periapical radiolucency the success rate is less favorable, 43%. Efforts should be made to maintain pulp vitality. Endodontic therapy can always be done, if in time the pulp develops necrosis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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2/7. Malignant lymphoma of the maxillary sinus manifesting as a persistent toothache.

    Many teeth have been mistakenly extracted or endodontically treated because of an incorrect diagnosis of orofacial pain, including toothache. A case of persistent toothache originating from a malignant lymphoma of the left maxillary sinus is presented. root canal therapy and extraction of the upper left quadrant teeth from the canine to the second molar did not resolve the chief complaint. The patient was referred to a neurologist and received a diagnosis of a malignant lymphoma, a rare lesion of the maxillary sinus. This case stresses the importance of considering malignant neoplasm of the maxillary sinus as a potential etiologic factor in the differential diagnosis of orofacial pain.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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3/7. Autoextraction in a child with autistic spectrum disorder.

    Many children with mild/moderate autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) receive care in general dental practice. We report a seven year old boy with ASD presenting with dental pain who auto-extracted one of his deciduous canines. Children with ASD may have hyposensitivity to pain and can exhibit unusual forms of self-injurious behaviour.
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ranking = 4
keywords = extraction
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4/7. Intra-oral tumours presenting after dental extraction.

    If the symptoms for which dental extraction is performed do not rapidly resolve, or if the tooth socket fails to heal, it is likely that there is further pathology in the alveolus or gingiva. A series of four cases is presented, in which, following dental extraction, a tumour was found to be the cause of the original symptoms.
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ranking = 6
keywords = extraction
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5/7. Barodontalgia at 12,000 feet.

    persons susceptible to barodontalgia include those with peridontal abscesses, carious teeth, maxillary sinus congestion, or those who have had recent extractions or restorations. A 38-year-old man had acute pain while he was in a depressurized chamber. Treatment of a periodontal abscess alleviated the problem.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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6/7. Undiagnosed benign cementoblastoma in a patient with a 6-year pain condition. Report of a case.

    Symptoms in the lower first molar developed in a 15-year-old girl. The problems started with tenderness during occlusion. The first radiographic examination revealed a radiopacity at the distal root, which was considered in the radiographic report to be a cementoma. Therapy commenced with occlusal adjustment, but this was followed 20 months later by endodontic therapy, which was undertaken because of the suspicion of partial pulpal necrosis with condensing osteitis. A painful condition developed and led first to apicoectomy and then to extraction 2 1/2 years after the start of the endodontic therapy. light microscopic examination of adjacent hard tissue revealed signs of chronic inflammation on both occasions, and a diagnosis of diffuse sclerosing osteomyelitis was made. The pain was not relieved but remained at a tolerable level for 18 months. Then a reexamination of the first radiographs led to a strong suspicion of a benign cementoblastoma. A thorough third operation revealed a small piece of hard tissue in a lacuna of the lingual part of the mandible covered buccally by granulation tissue and inflammatory affected bone. The final histopathologic diagnosis was benign cementoblastoma combined with chronic inflammation.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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7/7. Phantom tooth pain: a diagnosis of exclusion.

    This case report addresses the difficult diagnosis of phantom tooth pain (PTP). This is a syndrome of persistent pain in the teeth and oral structures following pulp extirpation, extraction, or rarely, an inferior alveolar nerve block. The incidence of this often misdiagnosed condition is estimated to be 3% of the population undergoing pulp extirpation, and is similar to phantom limb pain. The diagnosis of PTP is discussed here as a diagnosis of exclusion, after numerous interventions. Various treatment modalities are outlined and the use of non-traditional pharmacological approaches for pain reduction are discussed.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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