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Traumatic crown fractures in permanent incisors with immature roots: a follow-up study
Authors:G. Cavalleri  N. Zerman
Affiliation:Dental Clinic, University of Verona, Italy
Abstract:Abstract – A follow-up study of crown fractured permanent incisors with incomplete root formation was carried out in a group of patients, aged 6–12 years, over a 5-year-period in the Dental Clinic of the University of Verona, Italy. The number of injured patients was 55, representing 84 injured incisors. All patients were followed clinically and radiographically using a standardized follow-up protocol. The most common type of trauma was fracture of enamel and dentine without pulpal exposure (80%) and the most common type of treatment was restoration with the acid-etch composite resin technique (46%). Bonding of the crown fragment was performed in 10 instances (12%). At the 5-year-control all teeth with fracture of the enamel had no pulp complications. Four of 67 teeth (6%) with fracture of the enamel and dentine without pulpal involvement showed pulp necrosis and 1 tooth showed pulp obliteration (1.5%). Eight of 14 teeth (57%) with fractures of the enamel and dentine with pulp involvement showed pulp necrosis. Aesthetically 36 of the restored teeth were deemed satisfactory (43%). In 9 teeth the bonded fragment had to be rebonded. 14 teeth were considered unsatisfactorily restored due to wear of the composite (17%). 34 restored teeth had to be retreated because of a new trauma (40%). In one tooth a previous bonded fragment had to be rebonded. These results confirmed that crown fractures without pulp involvement in permanent incisors with incomplete root formation have a low percentage of pulp complications, while 60% of the teeth with crown fractures with pulp involvement had pulp complications.
Keywords:crown fracture    pulp exposure    pulp capping    dental bonding
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