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  2. Pulp canal obliteration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_canal_obliteration

    In other cases obliteration can occur if the tooth is drilled down extensively during dental treatment, e.g. during crown preparation. [2] Signs and symptoms of obliteration include: Yellow tooth discoloration [1] Lack or response to pulp sensibility test (e.g. ethyl chloride, electric pulp test) [1]

  3. Periapical periodontitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periapical_periodontitis

    It is a likely outcome of untreated dental caries (tooth decay), and in such cases it can be considered a sequela in the natural history of tooth decay, irreversible pulpitis and pulpal necrosis. Other causes can include occlusal trauma due to 'high spots' after restoration work, extrusion from the tooth of root filling material, or bacterial ...

  4. Pulpitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulpitis

    Pulpitis can often create so much pressure on the tooth nerve that the individual will have trouble locating the source of the pain, confusing it with neighboring teeth, called referred pain. The pulp cavity inherently provides the body with an immune system response challenge, which makes it very difficult for a bacterial infection to be ...

  5. Pulp capping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_capping

    Sedative material placed over exposed or nearly exposed pulp 1) crown 2) root 3) restoration 4) pulp cap 5) pulp chamber Pulpal dentin junction. 1) outside tooth/enamel 2) dentin tubule 3) dentin 4) odontoblastic process 5) predentin 6) odontoblast 7) capillaries 8) fibroblasts 9) nerve 10) artery/vein 11) cell-rich zone 12) cell-poor zone 13) pulp chamber

  6. Toothache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toothache

    Reversible/irreversible pulpitis is a distinct concept from whether the tooth is restorable or unrestorable, e.g. a tooth may only have reversible pulpitis, but has been structurally weakened by decay or trauma to the point that it is impossible to restore the tooth in the long term.

  7. Dental restoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_restoration

    Composites and amalgam are used mainly for direct restoration. Composites can be made of color matching the tooth, and the surface can be polished after the filling procedure has been completed. Amalgam fillings expand with age, possibly cracking the tooth and requiring repair and filling replacement, but chance of leakage of filling is less.

  8. Dentin hypersensitivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dentin_hypersensitivity

    Inflammation of the dental pulp, termed pulpitis, produces true hypersensitivity of the nerves in the dental pulp. [3] Pulpitis is classified as irreversible when pulpal inflammation will irreversibly progress to pulpal necrosis due to compression of the venous microcirculation and tissue ischemia, and reversible when the pulp is still capable ...

  9. Pulp polyp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_polyp

    A pulp polyp, also known as chronic hyperplastic pulpitis, is a "productive" (i.e., growing) inflammation of dental pulp in which the development of granulation tissue is seen in response to persistent, low-grade mechanical irritation and bacterial invasion of the pulp.