Description

Book Synopsis

The third edition of Textbook of Endodontology provides lucid scholarship and clear discussion of endodontic principles and treatment to dental students and dental practitioners searching for current information on endodontic theories and techniques.

  • Completely revised and updated new edition
  • Featuressix new chapters
  • Provides pedagogical features to promote understanding
  • Includes clinical case studies to put the information in the clinical context
  • Illustrated in full color throughout with clinical images and detailed diagrams
  • Offers interactive multiple-choice questions on a companion website



Table of Contents

List of contributors xiii

Foreword xvii

Preface xix

About the companion website xxi

1 Introduction to endodontology 1
John Whitworth, Lise-Lotte Kirkevang, and Lars Bjørndal

Endodontology 1

The objective of endodontic treatment 2

Clinical problems and solutions 2

The diagnostic dilemma 6

The outcome dilemma 6

The tools of treatment 6

References 7

Part 1 The Vital Pulp

2 The dentin–pulp complex: structure, functions, threats, and response to external injury 11
Lars Bjørndal and Alastair J. Sloan

Introduction 11

The odontoblast and the dentin–pulp complex 11

The dental pulp 17

Immune responses in the dentin–pulp complex 22

Responses of the healthy dentin–pulp complex to nondestructive stimuli 25

The dentin–pulp complex and responses to external injuries 25

Summary 29

References 29

3 Dentinal and pulpal pain 33
Inge Fristad and Matti N¨arhi

Introduction 33

Classification of nerve fibers 33

Morphology of intradental sensory innervation 33

Function of intradental sensory nerves 36

Sensitivity of dentin: hydrodynamic mechanism in pulpal A-fiber activation 38

Responses of intradental nerves to tissue injury and inflammation 40

Local control of pulpal nociceptor activation 44

Dentin hypersensitivity 44

Pain symptoms and pulpal diagnosis 45

References 46

4 Clinical pulp diagnosis and decision-making 49
Kerstin Petersson and Claes Reit

Introduction 49

Evaluation of diagnostic information 49

Diagnostic accuracy 50

Diagnostic strategy 51

Clinical manifestations of pulpal and periapical inflammation 51

Collecting diagnostic information 52

Diagnostic methodology: assessment of pulp vitality 53

Diagnostic methodology: evaluation of reported pain 55

Diagnostic methodology: provocation/inhibition of pain 56

Diagnostic methodology: evaluation of tooth discolorations 58

Diagnostic classification 58

References 59

5 Caries pathology and management in deep stages of lesion formation 61
Lars Bjørndal

Enamel lesions without clinical cavitation 63

Progressive stages of enamel–dentin lesions without surface cavitation and exposure of dentin to the oral environment 65

Cavitation of the dentin lesion 67

Concluding remarks on the natural history of dental caries 72

Strategies for the management of deep caries 72

Detailed treatment protocol for deep caries management 74

References 76

6 Treatment of vital pulp conditions 79
Lars Bjørndal, Helena Fransson, and St´ephane Simon

Introduction 79

Indications and treatment concepts for preserving vital pulp functions 80

Protocols for treatments aiming to preserve the vitality of the exposed pulp 81

Factors of importance in preserving vital pulp functions 87

Capping materials and healing patterns 89

Tissue–biomaterial interaction and pulp healing 91

Pulp-preserving treatments – a controversial treatment? 92

Indications and treatment concepts for treating the irreversibly inflamed vital pulp (pulpectomy) 93

Postoperative considerations 96

Choosing between pulp-preserving vital pulp therapies and pulpectomy 96

Concluding remarks on the avoidance of pulpectomy by vital pulp therapies 97

Revitalization and/or regenerative endodontic procedures 97

References 98

Part 2 The Infected Necrotic Pulp and Apical Periodontitis

7 Apical periodontitis 103
Zvi Metzger, Anda Kfir, and Itzhak Abramovitz

Introduction 103

The nature of apical periodontitis 103

Interactions with the infecting microbiota 107

Treatment and healing of periapical lesions 114

Persistence of periapical lesions 115

Clinical manifestations and diagnostic terminology 117

References 119

8 Microbiology of the inflamed and necrotic pulp 123
Luis E. Ch´avez de Paz

Introduction 123

Historical background 123

Clinical evidence 124

Infections in root-filled teeth with persistent apical periodontitis 126

Microbial pathogenesis of apical periodontitis 128

Association of signs and symptoms with specific bacteria 129

Biological evidence 131

Extraradicular biofilms 133

Ecological determinants for microbial growth in root canals 134

Microbial interactions in biofilms 134

Microbial resistance to antimicrobials 136

Antibiofilm strategies 137

Concluding remarks 138

References 138

9 Clinical diagnosis of pulp necrosis and apical periodontitis 143
Dag Ørstavik

Introduction 143

Clinical features of pulp necrosis and root canal infections 144

Radiographic features of apical periodontitis 147

A strategy for the formulation of a periapical diagnosis 153

Diagnostic challenges during treatment 153

Special cases of endodontic infections 154

An integrated approach to endodontic diagnosis 162

References 165

Part 3 Endodontic Treatment Procedures

10 Endodontic emergencies 171
Peter Jonasson, Maria Pigg, and Lars Bjørndal

Introduction 171

General diagnostic considerations and emergency principles 171

The etiology and pathogenesis behind emergency scenarios 171

Non-endodontic tooth pain – conditions of differential diagnostic interest 181

Management of patients with acute dental pain 182

References 183

11 Controlling the environment – the aseptic working field 185
Merete Markvart and Pia Titterud Sunde Background 185

Preparing teeth for rubber dam isolation and the development of an aseptic working field 186

Rubber dam isolation 187

Application of the rubber dam 189

Disinfection of the working field 189

Aseptic working procedures 190

References 192

12 Access and canal negotiation: the first key procedural steps for successful endodontic treatment 195
Ove A. Peters and Ana Arias

Introduction 195

Principles of tooth development and tooth anatomy 195

Individual analysis of the tooth, preoperative radiographs, and additional CBCT scans in

complex cases 196

Rubber dam isolation 196

Access cavity preparation 197

Canal negotiation 202

References 203

13 Root canal instrumentation 205
Lars Bergmans and Paul Lambrechts

Introduction 205

Principles of root canal instrumentation 205

Root canal system anatomy 206

Anatomical variations in teeth 211

Procedural steps 213

Endodontic instruments 217

Instrumentation techniques 221

Limitations of root canal instrumentation 223

Preventing procedural mishaps 225

References 228

14 Irrigation and disinfection 231
Markus Haapasalo and Ya Shen

Introduction 231

Eradication of microorganisms from the root canal system 231

Microbial reduction by instrumentation 232

Root canal irrigation 232

The apical root canal – a special challenge for irrigation 236

Activation of irrigant flow 237

Use of lasers in irrigation 238

Wide-spectrum sound energy for cleaning the root canal system 239

Intracanal medicaments 240

Concluding remarks 241

References 241

15 Root canal filling 247

15.1 Root canal filling materials 248
Gottfried Schmalz and Birger Thonemann

Introduction 248

Requirements 249

Evaluation of specific materials 253

References 272

15.2 Root canal filling techniques 277
Amir-Taymour Moinzadeh and Hagay Shemesh

Introduction 277

Clinical objectives and in vitro investigations 277

The root canal filling–dentin interface 277

Root canal filling techniques 281

Concluding remarks 289

References 289

Part 4 The Endodontically Treated Tooth

16 The root canal-treated tooth in prosthodontic reconstruction 295
Kishor Gulabivala and Yuan-Ling Ng

Introduction 295

Fracture predilection of root-treated teeth 295

Occlusal loading 298

Root canal-treated teeth as abutments 299

Distribution of remaining tooth structure and restorability 299

Principles of restoration of root-treated teeth 300

Timing of restoration after endodontic treatment 301

Approach to restoration of anterior teeth 302

Characteristics of posts 303

Preparation of the post space 307

Approach to restoration of posterior teeth 308

Core materials 310

Modes of restoration failure in root canal-treated teeth 310

Conclusions 311

References 312

17 Clinical epidemiology: measuring endodontic disease and treatment outcome 315
Lise-Lotte Kirkevang

Introduction 315

Defining a “successful” outcome 315

Study designs commonly used in endodontic research 317

Treatment outcome and risk factors 319

Concluding remarks 323

References 323

18 Endodontic retreatment – the decision-making process 327
Frank Setzer and Bekir Karabucak

Introduction 327

Why might the initial treatment be unsuccessful? 327

When may further intervention be considered? 329

Decision-making – the dentist’s perspective 330

Decision-making – the patient’s perspective 338

References 339

19 Nonsurgical retreatment 343
Thomas Kvist and Luc van der Sluis

Introduction 343

Indications 343

Instrumentation of the root canal 350

Prognosis 357

Summary 357

References 358

20 Surgical endodontics 361
Lise-Lotte Kirkevang, Vibe Rud, and Thomas Kvist

Introduction 361

General outline of the procedure 361

Local anesthesia 363

Flap design, incision, and raising the flap – general considerations 363

Access to the root tip 368

Root-end resection 369

Curettage of the soft-tissue lesion 369

Management of bleeding 370

Root-end preparation 371

Root-end filling 372

Repositioning and suturing of the flap 373

Postoperative measures 374

Follow-up after surgery 375

References 376

Part 5 Additional Considerations

21 Local anesthetic considerations 381
Nigel Foot and John Whitworth

Introduction 381

Fundamentals of local anesthetic action 381

Common local anesthetic agents in endodontics 382

Standard methods of local anesthesia for endodontics 383

Failure to secure anesthesia 385

Why may teeth be difficult to anesthetize? 386

Measures to preempt or overcome challenging local anesthesia 387

Supplementary injections 388

Sedation 390

Complications of local anesthesia 391

References 392

22 Complex orofacial pain conditions 393
Lene Baad-Hansen and Peter Svensson

Introduction 393

Overview of pain mechanisms 393

Diagnostic process 395

Complex orofacial pain conditions 397

Painful posttraumatic trigeminal neuropathy 397

Persistent idiopathic facial pain 398

Atypical odontalgia/persistent dentoalveolar pain 399

Trigeminal neuralgia 399

Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias 401

Migraine/neurovascular orofacial pain 401

Temporomandibular disorder pain – referred pain 401

Summary 402

References 402

23 Endodontic complications after trauma 405
John Whitworth

Introduction 405

Common dental injuries 405

Dental trauma and its consequences 405

Consequences of pulp breakdown and infection after trauma 411

General considerations in the management of dental trauma 416

Diagnostic quandaries: to remove or review the pulp after trauma? 422

References 424

24 Medicolegal considerations 427
Lars Bjørndal, Shiv Pabary, and John Whitworth

Introduction 427

Ethical considerations – the concepts of beneficence and nonmaleficence 427

Defining best practice 427

Endodontic procedures as complex interventions with scope for imperfection,

oversight and error 428

Examples of errors and accidents 428

Do errors always lead to legal action? 430

Professional indemnity/malpractice insurance 430

Managing risks 431

Conclusion 433

References 434

25 Emergencies in need of urgent referral 435
Tara Renton

Introduction 435

Neurological injuries resulting from endodontic procedures and materials 435

Neurological injuries resulting from periapical inflammation 440

Chemical tissue trauma 441

Severe odontogenic infections that may compromise systemic health 443

Suspicion of locally aggressive or neoplastic lesions 444

Severe or persistent pain 445

Inhalation or aspiration of dental instruments or materials 445

Allergic responses that may compromise systemic health 445

Reporting adverse events 446

Summary 446

References 446

26 The transition to independent practice 451
Peter Musaeus

Introduction 451

The challenge of transition 452

Learning: explanations and strategies 454

Conclusion 460

Acknowledgment 461

References 461

Index 463

Textbook of Endodontology

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 20/07/2018
      ISBN13: 9781119057314, 978-1119057314
      ISBN10: 1119057310

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The third edition of Textbook of Endodontology provides lucid scholarship and clear discussion of endodontic principles and treatment to dental students and dental practitioners searching for current information on endodontic theories and techniques.

      • Completely revised and updated new edition
      • Featuressix new chapters
      • Provides pedagogical features to promote understanding
      • Includes clinical case studies to put the information in the clinical context
      • Illustrated in full color throughout with clinical images and detailed diagrams
      • Offers interactive multiple-choice questions on a companion website



      Table of Contents

      List of contributors xiii

      Foreword xvii

      Preface xix

      About the companion website xxi

      1 Introduction to endodontology 1
      John Whitworth, Lise-Lotte Kirkevang, and Lars Bjørndal

      Endodontology 1

      The objective of endodontic treatment 2

      Clinical problems and solutions 2

      The diagnostic dilemma 6

      The outcome dilemma 6

      The tools of treatment 6

      References 7

      Part 1 The Vital Pulp

      2 The dentin–pulp complex: structure, functions, threats, and response to external injury 11
      Lars Bjørndal and Alastair J. Sloan

      Introduction 11

      The odontoblast and the dentin–pulp complex 11

      The dental pulp 17

      Immune responses in the dentin–pulp complex 22

      Responses of the healthy dentin–pulp complex to nondestructive stimuli 25

      The dentin–pulp complex and responses to external injuries 25

      Summary 29

      References 29

      3 Dentinal and pulpal pain 33
      Inge Fristad and Matti N¨arhi

      Introduction 33

      Classification of nerve fibers 33

      Morphology of intradental sensory innervation 33

      Function of intradental sensory nerves 36

      Sensitivity of dentin: hydrodynamic mechanism in pulpal A-fiber activation 38

      Responses of intradental nerves to tissue injury and inflammation 40

      Local control of pulpal nociceptor activation 44

      Dentin hypersensitivity 44

      Pain symptoms and pulpal diagnosis 45

      References 46

      4 Clinical pulp diagnosis and decision-making 49
      Kerstin Petersson and Claes Reit

      Introduction 49

      Evaluation of diagnostic information 49

      Diagnostic accuracy 50

      Diagnostic strategy 51

      Clinical manifestations of pulpal and periapical inflammation 51

      Collecting diagnostic information 52

      Diagnostic methodology: assessment of pulp vitality 53

      Diagnostic methodology: evaluation of reported pain 55

      Diagnostic methodology: provocation/inhibition of pain 56

      Diagnostic methodology: evaluation of tooth discolorations 58

      Diagnostic classification 58

      References 59

      5 Caries pathology and management in deep stages of lesion formation 61
      Lars Bjørndal

      Enamel lesions without clinical cavitation 63

      Progressive stages of enamel–dentin lesions without surface cavitation and exposure of dentin to the oral environment 65

      Cavitation of the dentin lesion 67

      Concluding remarks on the natural history of dental caries 72

      Strategies for the management of deep caries 72

      Detailed treatment protocol for deep caries management 74

      References 76

      6 Treatment of vital pulp conditions 79
      Lars Bjørndal, Helena Fransson, and St´ephane Simon

      Introduction 79

      Indications and treatment concepts for preserving vital pulp functions 80

      Protocols for treatments aiming to preserve the vitality of the exposed pulp 81

      Factors of importance in preserving vital pulp functions 87

      Capping materials and healing patterns 89

      Tissue–biomaterial interaction and pulp healing 91

      Pulp-preserving treatments – a controversial treatment? 92

      Indications and treatment concepts for treating the irreversibly inflamed vital pulp (pulpectomy) 93

      Postoperative considerations 96

      Choosing between pulp-preserving vital pulp therapies and pulpectomy 96

      Concluding remarks on the avoidance of pulpectomy by vital pulp therapies 97

      Revitalization and/or regenerative endodontic procedures 97

      References 98

      Part 2 The Infected Necrotic Pulp and Apical Periodontitis

      7 Apical periodontitis 103
      Zvi Metzger, Anda Kfir, and Itzhak Abramovitz

      Introduction 103

      The nature of apical periodontitis 103

      Interactions with the infecting microbiota 107

      Treatment and healing of periapical lesions 114

      Persistence of periapical lesions 115

      Clinical manifestations and diagnostic terminology 117

      References 119

      8 Microbiology of the inflamed and necrotic pulp 123
      Luis E. Ch´avez de Paz

      Introduction 123

      Historical background 123

      Clinical evidence 124

      Infections in root-filled teeth with persistent apical periodontitis 126

      Microbial pathogenesis of apical periodontitis 128

      Association of signs and symptoms with specific bacteria 129

      Biological evidence 131

      Extraradicular biofilms 133

      Ecological determinants for microbial growth in root canals 134

      Microbial interactions in biofilms 134

      Microbial resistance to antimicrobials 136

      Antibiofilm strategies 137

      Concluding remarks 138

      References 138

      9 Clinical diagnosis of pulp necrosis and apical periodontitis 143
      Dag Ørstavik

      Introduction 143

      Clinical features of pulp necrosis and root canal infections 144

      Radiographic features of apical periodontitis 147

      A strategy for the formulation of a periapical diagnosis 153

      Diagnostic challenges during treatment 153

      Special cases of endodontic infections 154

      An integrated approach to endodontic diagnosis 162

      References 165

      Part 3 Endodontic Treatment Procedures

      10 Endodontic emergencies 171
      Peter Jonasson, Maria Pigg, and Lars Bjørndal

      Introduction 171

      General diagnostic considerations and emergency principles 171

      The etiology and pathogenesis behind emergency scenarios 171

      Non-endodontic tooth pain – conditions of differential diagnostic interest 181

      Management of patients with acute dental pain 182

      References 183

      11 Controlling the environment – the aseptic working field 185
      Merete Markvart and Pia Titterud Sunde Background 185

      Preparing teeth for rubber dam isolation and the development of an aseptic working field 186

      Rubber dam isolation 187

      Application of the rubber dam 189

      Disinfection of the working field 189

      Aseptic working procedures 190

      References 192

      12 Access and canal negotiation: the first key procedural steps for successful endodontic treatment 195
      Ove A. Peters and Ana Arias

      Introduction 195

      Principles of tooth development and tooth anatomy 195

      Individual analysis of the tooth, preoperative radiographs, and additional CBCT scans in

      complex cases 196

      Rubber dam isolation 196

      Access cavity preparation 197

      Canal negotiation 202

      References 203

      13 Root canal instrumentation 205
      Lars Bergmans and Paul Lambrechts

      Introduction 205

      Principles of root canal instrumentation 205

      Root canal system anatomy 206

      Anatomical variations in teeth 211

      Procedural steps 213

      Endodontic instruments 217

      Instrumentation techniques 221

      Limitations of root canal instrumentation 223

      Preventing procedural mishaps 225

      References 228

      14 Irrigation and disinfection 231
      Markus Haapasalo and Ya Shen

      Introduction 231

      Eradication of microorganisms from the root canal system 231

      Microbial reduction by instrumentation 232

      Root canal irrigation 232

      The apical root canal – a special challenge for irrigation 236

      Activation of irrigant flow 237

      Use of lasers in irrigation 238

      Wide-spectrum sound energy for cleaning the root canal system 239

      Intracanal medicaments 240

      Concluding remarks 241

      References 241

      15 Root canal filling 247

      15.1 Root canal filling materials 248
      Gottfried Schmalz and Birger Thonemann

      Introduction 248

      Requirements 249

      Evaluation of specific materials 253

      References 272

      15.2 Root canal filling techniques 277
      Amir-Taymour Moinzadeh and Hagay Shemesh

      Introduction 277

      Clinical objectives and in vitro investigations 277

      The root canal filling–dentin interface 277

      Root canal filling techniques 281

      Concluding remarks 289

      References 289

      Part 4 The Endodontically Treated Tooth

      16 The root canal-treated tooth in prosthodontic reconstruction 295
      Kishor Gulabivala and Yuan-Ling Ng

      Introduction 295

      Fracture predilection of root-treated teeth 295

      Occlusal loading 298

      Root canal-treated teeth as abutments 299

      Distribution of remaining tooth structure and restorability 299

      Principles of restoration of root-treated teeth 300

      Timing of restoration after endodontic treatment 301

      Approach to restoration of anterior teeth 302

      Characteristics of posts 303

      Preparation of the post space 307

      Approach to restoration of posterior teeth 308

      Core materials 310

      Modes of restoration failure in root canal-treated teeth 310

      Conclusions 311

      References 312

      17 Clinical epidemiology: measuring endodontic disease and treatment outcome 315
      Lise-Lotte Kirkevang

      Introduction 315

      Defining a “successful” outcome 315

      Study designs commonly used in endodontic research 317

      Treatment outcome and risk factors 319

      Concluding remarks 323

      References 323

      18 Endodontic retreatment – the decision-making process 327
      Frank Setzer and Bekir Karabucak

      Introduction 327

      Why might the initial treatment be unsuccessful? 327

      When may further intervention be considered? 329

      Decision-making – the dentist’s perspective 330

      Decision-making – the patient’s perspective 338

      References 339

      19 Nonsurgical retreatment 343
      Thomas Kvist and Luc van der Sluis

      Introduction 343

      Indications 343

      Instrumentation of the root canal 350

      Prognosis 357

      Summary 357

      References 358

      20 Surgical endodontics 361
      Lise-Lotte Kirkevang, Vibe Rud, and Thomas Kvist

      Introduction 361

      General outline of the procedure 361

      Local anesthesia 363

      Flap design, incision, and raising the flap – general considerations 363

      Access to the root tip 368

      Root-end resection 369

      Curettage of the soft-tissue lesion 369

      Management of bleeding 370

      Root-end preparation 371

      Root-end filling 372

      Repositioning and suturing of the flap 373

      Postoperative measures 374

      Follow-up after surgery 375

      References 376

      Part 5 Additional Considerations

      21 Local anesthetic considerations 381
      Nigel Foot and John Whitworth

      Introduction 381

      Fundamentals of local anesthetic action 381

      Common local anesthetic agents in endodontics 382

      Standard methods of local anesthesia for endodontics 383

      Failure to secure anesthesia 385

      Why may teeth be difficult to anesthetize? 386

      Measures to preempt or overcome challenging local anesthesia 387

      Supplementary injections 388

      Sedation 390

      Complications of local anesthesia 391

      References 392

      22 Complex orofacial pain conditions 393
      Lene Baad-Hansen and Peter Svensson

      Introduction 393

      Overview of pain mechanisms 393

      Diagnostic process 395

      Complex orofacial pain conditions 397

      Painful posttraumatic trigeminal neuropathy 397

      Persistent idiopathic facial pain 398

      Atypical odontalgia/persistent dentoalveolar pain 399

      Trigeminal neuralgia 399

      Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias 401

      Migraine/neurovascular orofacial pain 401

      Temporomandibular disorder pain – referred pain 401

      Summary 402

      References 402

      23 Endodontic complications after trauma 405
      John Whitworth

      Introduction 405

      Common dental injuries 405

      Dental trauma and its consequences 405

      Consequences of pulp breakdown and infection after trauma 411

      General considerations in the management of dental trauma 416

      Diagnostic quandaries: to remove or review the pulp after trauma? 422

      References 424

      24 Medicolegal considerations 427
      Lars Bjørndal, Shiv Pabary, and John Whitworth

      Introduction 427

      Ethical considerations – the concepts of beneficence and nonmaleficence 427

      Defining best practice 427

      Endodontic procedures as complex interventions with scope for imperfection,

      oversight and error 428

      Examples of errors and accidents 428

      Do errors always lead to legal action? 430

      Professional indemnity/malpractice insurance 430

      Managing risks 431

      Conclusion 433

      References 434

      25 Emergencies in need of urgent referral 435
      Tara Renton

      Introduction 435

      Neurological injuries resulting from endodontic procedures and materials 435

      Neurological injuries resulting from periapical inflammation 440

      Chemical tissue trauma 441

      Severe odontogenic infections that may compromise systemic health 443

      Suspicion of locally aggressive or neoplastic lesions 444

      Severe or persistent pain 445

      Inhalation or aspiration of dental instruments or materials 445

      Allergic responses that may compromise systemic health 445

      Reporting adverse events 446

      Summary 446

      References 446

      26 The transition to independent practice 451
      Peter Musaeus

      Introduction 451

      The challenge of transition 452

      Learning: explanations and strategies 454

      Conclusion 460

      Acknowledgment 461

      References 461

      Index 463

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