From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Internal resorption is an unusual condition of a tooth when the dentin and pulpal walls begin to resorb centrally within the root canal. The first evidence of the lesion may be the appearance of a pink-hued area on the crown of the tooth; this condition is referred to pink tooth of Mummery, after the 19th century anatomist James Howard Mummery, and represents the hyperplastic, vascular pulp tissue filling-in the resorbed areas.
The cause can sometimes be attributed to trauma to the tooth, but other times there is no known etiology. If the condition is discovered prior to perforation of the crown or root has occurred, endodontic therapy, known as root canal therapy in lay terms, may be carried out with the expectation of a fairly high success rate.
[edit] References
- Kahn, Michael A. Basic Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology. Volume 1. 2001.
Endodontology |
|
Diagnostic tests |
Electric pulp test - Thermal test - Percussion test
|
|
Pulpal Diagnosis |
|
|
Periapical Diagnosis |
Acute apical periodontitis - Chronic apical periodontitis - Perio-endo lesion - Fistula - Periapical abscess - Phoenix abscess - Vertical root fracture
|
|
Anatomy |
|
|
Armamentarium and material |
|
|
Endodontic procedures |
|
|
Other specialties |
|
|
Oral Pathology: Stomatognathic disease (K00-K14, 520-529) |
|
Developmental Anomalies |
Anodontia/ Hypodontia - Hyperdontia - abnormalities of size and form of teeth ( Concrescence, Fusion, Gemination, Dens evaginatus/ Talon cusp, Dens invaginatus, Enamel pearl, Macrodontia, Microdontia, Taurodontism) - disturbances in tooth formation ( Dilaceration, Regional odontodysplasia, Turner's hypoplasia) - other hereditary disturbances in tooth structure ( Amelogenesis imperfecta, Dentinogenesis imperfecta, Dentin dysplasia)
|
|
Hard, Soft and Periapical Tissues |
|
|
Dentofacial Anomalies |
|
|
Maxillomandibular anomalies |
|
|
Salivary glands |
|
|
Lip and Oral mucosa |
|
|
Tongue |
|
|
Other |
|
|