endodontic microbiology (23)

Cards (36)

  • What type of tissue is dental pulp?
    Connective tissue
  • Where is dental pulp located?
    In the central cavity of the teeth
  • What are the functions of dental pulp?
    Nutritional, sensory, and protective functions
  • What is endodontics?
    Branch of dentistry for tooth root treatment
  • What is pulpitis?
    Inflammation of the pulp
  • What is apical periodontitis?
    Inflammation of periradicular tissues
  • What are the types of pulp and periradicular infections?
    • Acute
    • Chronic
  • What is the primary cause of pulp infection?
    Oral microorganisms
  • What factors influence endodontic infection?
    Infecting organism, pulp conditions, host defense
  • What protects the pulp from microorganisms?
    Enamel, cementum, and dentin
  • What are endogenous factors that can alter physical barriers?
    Systemic diseases like diabetes
  • What are exogenous factors affecting pulp infection?
    Physical, chemical, and microbial factors
  • What can cause direct communication of the oral cavity with the pulp?
    Carious lesions and dental fractures
  • What is the most prevalent cause of dental pulp infection?
    Communication of carious dentin through dentinal tubules
  • What is one route of entry for microbiota into the pulp?
    Periodontal entry
  • What is marginal leakage of restorations?
    Leakage through restorative material interface
  • What is contiguity in the context of endodontic infection?
    Infectious processes adjacent to tooth structure
  • What is anachoresis?
    Infection through the bloodstream
  • What factors affect microbial colonization in endodontic infections?
    Entry, infectious dose, adhesion, proliferation
  • What are virulence factors in endodontic infections?
    Exotoxins, endotoxins, bacterial enzymes
  • What is the acute phase of the inflammatory response?
    Involves neutrophils and macrophages
  • What occurs during the chronic phase of inflammation?
    Lymphocytes, macrophages, and plasma cells involved
  • What do inflammatory mediators do?
    Attract inflammatory cells and produce hyperemia
  • What is symptomatic pulpitis?
    Pain persists after stimulus removal
  • What characterizes acute symptomatic pulpitis?
    Intermittent pain
  • What characterizes chronic symptomatic pulpitis?
    Moderate, diffuse, difficult-to-locate pain
  • What is asymptomatic pulpitis?
    Inflammation without perceived pain
  • What are the clinical features of apical periodontitis?
    • Symptomatic pulpitis
    • Asymptomatic pulpitis
    • Periapical injuries
    • Periapical abscesses
  • What is the relationship between microbial aggression and pulp condition?
    High aggression leads to symptomatic pulpitis
  • What is the role of root canal treatment?
    To manage high microbial aggression
  • What is the purpose of microbiological diagnosis in endodontics?
    Identify and treat primary foci of infection
  • What is the choice of antibiotic for purulent symptomatic irreversible pulpitis?
    Amoxicillin + clavulanic acid
  • What is an alternative antibiotic for immunocompromised patients?
    Clindamycin or metronidazole + spiramycin
  • What are the methods for microbiological diagnosis in endodontics?
    1. Direct examination
    2. Culture
    • Sample collection method
    • Sample processing
  • What are the conditions for culture sample collection?
    • Difficult without contamination
    • Requires expert professional
  • When is microbiological culture performed?
    • Resistant endodontic infections
    • Immunosuppressed patients