1 / 38

Complications of Extraction of Impacted Teeth

Complications of Extraction of Impacted Teeth. dr shabeel pn. Outline. Soft Tissue Injuries Complications with the Tooth Being Extracted Injuries to Adjacent Teeth Injuries to Osseous Structures Injuries To Adjacent Structures Oroantral Communications Postoperative Bleeding

taran
Download Presentation

Complications of Extraction of Impacted Teeth

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Complications of Extractionof Impacted Teeth dr shabeel pn

  2. Outline • Soft Tissue Injuries • Complications with the Tooth Being Extracted • Injuries to Adjacent Teeth • Injuries to Osseous Structures • Injuries To Adjacent Structures • Oroantral Communications • Postoperative Bleeding • Delayed Healing & Infection

  3. I. Soft Tissue Injuries

  4. 1. Tearing Mucosal Flap Causes Due to an inadequately sized flap which is retracted beyond the tissue`s ability to stretch. As with a short envelope flap when the area of surgery is at the apex.

  5. Prevention -Adequately sized flaps -Gentle Retraction Management Reposition the flap & suture If the tear is jagged, trim it before suturing

  6. 2. Puncture Wound of Soft Tissue Cause Instrument Slippage Prevention Controlled force Management Suturing to prevent infection & allow healing to occur

  7. 3. Stretch or Abrasion Injury Cause Bur shank or retractor injury Prevention Care Management Keep it moist ( ointment ) Heals within 5 – 10 days

  8. II. Complications with the tooth Being Extracted

  9. 1. Root Fracture Cause Long, curved, divergent roots Excessive force during extraction Prevention Proper exposure & bone removal

  10. 2. Root Displacement Into: • Mandibular Canal • Lingual Pouch • Infratemporal Space • Maxillary Sinus

  11. III. Injuries to Adjacent Teeth • Luxation of Adjacent Teeth • Fracture of Adjacent Restoration Cause Carelesness Prevention Judicious use of elevators

  12. IV. Injuries to Osseous Structures

  13. 1. Fracture of Alveolar Process Fracture of the Buccal or Lingual Cortex Cause Inadequate exposure & excessive force Prevention Adequate bone removal & eposure

  14. 2. Fracture of Maxillary Tuberosity Cause Excessive force Prevention Proper support and controlled force Management If still attached; dissect and remove the tooth If detached; smooth bone edges & suture

  15. 3. Fracture of the Mandible Cause Excessive force Prevention Proper bone removal & controlled force

  16. Photoelastic model of the mandible, showing the development of stress during a luxation attempt of the third molar when insufficient bone has been removed from the tooth peripherally

  17. V. Injuries to Adjacent Structures

  18. 1. Injury to Inferior Alveolar Nerve Cause -Excessive extraction force in case of curved roots -Sectioning the tooth all the way inferiorly Prevention -Proper exposure & bone removal -Controlled force -Careful setioning, leaving a shell of the tooth

  19. 2. Injury to the Lingual Nerve Cause -Placement of the retromolar incision far lingually -Sectioning the tooth all the way to the lingual cortex Prevention -Proper incision -Careful sectioning, leaving a shell of the tooth

  20. 3. Injury to the TMJ Cause Inadequate support of the mandible during extraction Prevention Use of bite block Management Reduction

  21. Vi. Oroantral Communication Cause During extraction of an impacted maxillary canine -Excessive bone removal -Failure to locate the tooth Prevention -Proper preoperative radiographic evaluation -Proper bone removal -Controlled force

  22. VII. Postoperative Bleeding Cause -Bleeding at wound margins -Bleeding at a bony foramen within the socket -Medical Problem

  23. Prevention -Good history taking (coagulopathy, medications…etc) -Atrumatic surgical extraction (clean incisions, gentle management of soft tissues, smoothen bony specules, curette granulation tissue) -Obtain good homeostasis at surgery - Postoperative instructions

  24. Management Local Measures • Pressure packs • Suturing • Ligate bleeding vessels • Burnish bone • Apply material to aid in hemostasis (surgicell, collaplug)

  25. VIII. Delayed Healing & Infection

  26. 1. Infection Cause Debris left under the flap Prevention Irrigation Management Debridement & Drainage

  27. 2. Dry Socket (Alveolar Ostitis) Cause -Lysis of a fully formed blood clot before the clot is replaced with granulation tissue. -Higher incidence with smokers & patients taking oral contaceptives. Prevention -Presurgical irrigation with antimicrobial agents ,e.g: chlorhexidine -Intraoperative irrigation with saline

  28. Management • Irrigate with warm saline • Remove old clots • Place sedative dressing • Prescribe mild analgesics • Reassess after 24 to 48 hours

More Related