Management of Immature Necrotic Permanent Teeth with Regenerative Endodontic Procedures - A Review of Literature
Author(s) -
Muhammad Hasan Hameed,
Meisha Gul,
Robia Ghafoor,
Sheikh Bilal Badar
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the pakistan medical association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.242
H-Index - 43
ISSN - 0030-9982
DOI - 10.5455/jpma.294366
Subject(s) - apexification , medicine , mineral trioxide aggregate , dentistry , endodontist , pulp (tooth) , dentin , permanent teeth , treatment modality , endodontics , hard tissue , dentinal tubule , pulp capping , surgery
Immature necrotic permanent tooth presents a distinctive challenge for the endodontist. Various treatment modalities have been employed to create hard tissue barrier at the apex, which includes non-vital pulp therapy with calcium hydroxide, apexification with mineral trioxide aggregate, pulp revascularisation and regeneration. Regenerative endodontics is a novel modality which involves physiological replacement of the damaged structures of tooth like dentin, root and cells of the pulp-dentin complex. Numerous published case reports have revealed increased dentinal wall thickness, continued root development and apical closure, but there is still lack of sound scientific evidence regarding histological nature of the type of tissue. The current literature review was planned to summarise the evidence regarding the treatment of immature necrotic permanent teeth by regenerative endodontic procedures.
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