Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention. / Bjørndal, Lars; Pedersen, Sune Demant Nørgaard; Dabelsteen, Sally.

I: Journal of Endodontics, Bind 40, Nr. 4 Suppl, 04.2014, s. S76-81.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bjørndal, L, Pedersen, SDN & Dabelsteen, S 2014, 'Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention', Journal of Endodontics, bind 40, nr. 4 Suppl, s. S76-81. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016

APA

Bjørndal, L., Pedersen, S. D. N., & Dabelsteen, S. (2014). Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention. Journal of Endodontics, 40(4 Suppl), S76-81. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016

Vancouver

Bjørndal L, Pedersen SDN, Dabelsteen S. Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention. Journal of Endodontics. 2014 apr.;40(4 Suppl):S76-81. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016

Author

Bjørndal, Lars ; Pedersen, Sune Demant Nørgaard ; Dabelsteen, Sally. / Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention. I: Journal of Endodontics. 2014 ; Bind 40, Nr. 4 Suppl. s. S76-81.

Bibtex

@article{42d95db9b719494995b70eda965c8733,
title = "Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention",
abstract = "Studies on dental regeneration involving interventions for pulp therapy such as regeneration and revascularization procedures are promising for the injured tooth; however, a complete replication of the original pulp tissue does not seem to take place. In cases in which we wish to preserve or maintain parts of the pulp during treatment, it is apparent that the effectiveness of healing or biological regeneration is dependent on the degree of inflammation of the pulp tissue. Thus, the control or prevention of a pulp infection is still a major issue for the clinicians. Data indicate that the typical reason for performing endodontic treatment is deep caries. The biological concept of vital pulp therapy associated with deep caries takes the treatment and evaluation of the unexposed as well as the exposed pulp into account. Interestingly, the clinical diagnosis is typically the same. Deep caries with reversible pulpitis may receive differing treatments such as excavation procedures aiming to avoid pulp exposure or more pulp invasive treatments such as pulp capping or pulpotomy. This should not be the case. Consequently, huge treatment variation is noted among clinicians based on the same caries diagnosis. Which treatment should be selected? High-quality trials are needed, and it is important to obtain information on the actual lesion depth and an estimate of the lesion activity before treatment. These may be basic indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp. Recent clinical trials dealing with the treatment of deep caries lesion are discussed, including pulp invasive and noninvasive concepts, to attempt to solve the task of getting the best clinical outcome for adult patients.",
author = "Lars Bj{\o}rndal and Pedersen, {Sune Demant N{\o}rgaard} and Sally Dabelsteen",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2014 American Association of Endodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
year = "2014",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "S76--81",
journal = "Journal of Endodontics",
issn = "0099-2399",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4 Suppl",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Depth and activity of carious lesions as indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp after intervention

AU - Bjørndal, Lars

AU - Pedersen, Sune Demant Nørgaard

AU - Dabelsteen, Sally

N1 - Copyright © 2014 American Association of Endodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PY - 2014/4

Y1 - 2014/4

N2 - Studies on dental regeneration involving interventions for pulp therapy such as regeneration and revascularization procedures are promising for the injured tooth; however, a complete replication of the original pulp tissue does not seem to take place. In cases in which we wish to preserve or maintain parts of the pulp during treatment, it is apparent that the effectiveness of healing or biological regeneration is dependent on the degree of inflammation of the pulp tissue. Thus, the control or prevention of a pulp infection is still a major issue for the clinicians. Data indicate that the typical reason for performing endodontic treatment is deep caries. The biological concept of vital pulp therapy associated with deep caries takes the treatment and evaluation of the unexposed as well as the exposed pulp into account. Interestingly, the clinical diagnosis is typically the same. Deep caries with reversible pulpitis may receive differing treatments such as excavation procedures aiming to avoid pulp exposure or more pulp invasive treatments such as pulp capping or pulpotomy. This should not be the case. Consequently, huge treatment variation is noted among clinicians based on the same caries diagnosis. Which treatment should be selected? High-quality trials are needed, and it is important to obtain information on the actual lesion depth and an estimate of the lesion activity before treatment. These may be basic indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp. Recent clinical trials dealing with the treatment of deep caries lesion are discussed, including pulp invasive and noninvasive concepts, to attempt to solve the task of getting the best clinical outcome for adult patients.

AB - Studies on dental regeneration involving interventions for pulp therapy such as regeneration and revascularization procedures are promising for the injured tooth; however, a complete replication of the original pulp tissue does not seem to take place. In cases in which we wish to preserve or maintain parts of the pulp during treatment, it is apparent that the effectiveness of healing or biological regeneration is dependent on the degree of inflammation of the pulp tissue. Thus, the control or prevention of a pulp infection is still a major issue for the clinicians. Data indicate that the typical reason for performing endodontic treatment is deep caries. The biological concept of vital pulp therapy associated with deep caries takes the treatment and evaluation of the unexposed as well as the exposed pulp into account. Interestingly, the clinical diagnosis is typically the same. Deep caries with reversible pulpitis may receive differing treatments such as excavation procedures aiming to avoid pulp exposure or more pulp invasive treatments such as pulp capping or pulpotomy. This should not be the case. Consequently, huge treatment variation is noted among clinicians based on the same caries diagnosis. Which treatment should be selected? High-quality trials are needed, and it is important to obtain information on the actual lesion depth and an estimate of the lesion activity before treatment. These may be basic indicators for the regenerative potential of dental pulp. Recent clinical trials dealing with the treatment of deep caries lesion are discussed, including pulp invasive and noninvasive concepts, to attempt to solve the task of getting the best clinical outcome for adult patients.

U2 - 10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016

DO - 10.1016/j.joen.2014.01.016

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24698699

VL - 40

SP - S76-81

JO - Journal of Endodontics

JF - Journal of Endodontics

SN - 0099-2399

IS - 4 Suppl

ER -

ID: 118052693