Holan Gideon
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, The Hebrew University--Hadassah School of Dental Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.
Dent Traumatol. 2004 Oct;20(5):276-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-9657.2004.00285.x.
The purpose was to evaluate late complications of asymptomatic traumatized primary incisors with dark coronal discoloration. The clinical and radiographic signs of 97 teeth of the study group were recorded along a follow-up period that ranged between 12 and 75 months (mean >36 months). Children's age at time of injury ranged between 18 and 72 months (mean 40). The control group consisted of 102 non-discolored maxillary primary central incisors in 51 children older than 54 months with no history of dental trauma. In 50 teeth (52%) the color faded or became yellowish and in 47 (48%) it remained dark. Clinical signs of infection, that were diagnosed 5-58 months after the injury, were associated significantly more with dark than yellowish hues (83 and 17%, respectively). Teeth that had changed their color to become yellow presented more PCO than teeth with black/gray/brown coronal discoloration (78 and 6%, respectively). Arrest of dentine apposition was found in 15 teeth, one had yellow coronal discoloration and the remaining 14 had a dark shade. Eleven teeth showed inflammatory root resorption all with dark discoloration. Two atypical types of root resorption were observed: a surface resorption restricted to the lateral aspects of the apical half of the root while the root length remained unchanged and in the other expansion of the follicle of the permanent successor was observed. Expansion of the dental follicle was observed in 72% of all teeth with no significant difference between the various types of coronal discoloration but only half of the cases were associated with resorption of the root of the primary incisor. The various pathologic findings observed in the study group were either absent or rarely seen in the control group. It can be concluded that more than 50% of the primary incisors that retain their dark coronal discoloration acquired after dental injuries remain clinically asymptomatic till the eruption of the permanent successor even if they present accelerated root resorption. Asymptomatic traumatized primary incisors that retain their dark coronal discoloration may develop a sinus tract and inflammatory root resorption years after the injury. There is still a dilemma: which treatment is better for dark discolored primary incisors: early endodontic treatment or follow-up with the risk of development of infection and root resorption that may require extraction?
本研究旨在评估无症状的、受过外伤且冠部变色的乳切牙的远期并发症。在12至75个月(平均>36个月)的随访期内,记录了研究组97颗牙齿的临床和影像学表现。受伤时儿童的年龄在18至72个月之间(平均40个月)。对照组由51名年龄超过54个月且无牙外伤史的儿童的102颗未变色的上颌乳中切牙组成。50颗牙齿(52%)的颜色变浅或变黄,47颗(48%)仍保持深色。受伤后5至58个月诊断出的感染临床体征,在深色牙齿中显著多于黄色牙齿(分别为83%和17%)。颜色变为黄色的牙齿比冠部呈黑色/灰色/棕色变色的牙齿出现更多的牙髓腔钙化(分别为78%和6%)。在15颗牙齿中发现牙本质沉积停止,其中1颗冠部变黄,其余14颗颜色较深。11颗牙齿出现炎性牙根吸收,均为深色。观察到两种非典型的牙根吸收类型:一种是根尖一半侧面的表面吸收,牙根长度不变;另一种是观察到恒牙胚囊扩大。在所有牙齿中,72%观察到牙囊扩大,不同类型的冠部变色之间无显著差异,但只有一半的病例与乳切牙牙根吸收有关。研究组中观察到的各种病理表现在对照组中要么不存在,要么很少见。可以得出结论,超过50%的牙外伤后冠部保持深色的乳切牙,即使出现牙根加速吸收,在恒牙萌出前临床上仍无症状。无症状的、受过外伤且冠部保持深色的乳切牙在受伤数年之后可能会形成窦道和炎性牙根吸收。目前仍存在一个两难问题:对于冠部深色的乳切牙,哪种治疗方法更好:早期牙髓治疗还是随访观察,同时承担可能发展为感染和牙根吸收而可能需要拔除的风险?