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- Title
Extraction as a treatment alternative follows repeated trauma in a severely handicapped patient.
- Authors
Tsai, Tzong‐Ping; Tsai, T P
- Abstract
Handicapped patients with protruding maxillary incisors are prone to repeated dental trauma. A 13-year-old girl with cerebral palsy, severe mental retardation and seizure disorder was referred to our department for restoring the traumatized anterior teeth. Despite drug combination, the frequency of seizure attack was around 10 times a month. The oral examination showed multiple caries, gingival hyperplasia, class II malocclusion with 14 mm overjet and deep overbite. During the first 3 years of a 7-year follow-up period, six episodes of anterior tooth trauma due to seizure attack occurred. The trauma-related treatment performed included endodontic therapy, multiple composite restorations, apical repositional flap, and finally extraction of all four upper incisors with fabrication of a semi-fixed band-retained denture. The denture restored normal overbite and overjet with improved esthetics. For 4 years following the fabrication of denture, no trauma occurred to the anterior teeth in later seizure attacks. Considering inadequate control of seizure disorder, little ability of the patient to receive comprehensive orthodontic treatment, poor prognosis of restorations, and possible future injuries, the removal of non-functional, nonesthetic, trauma-susceptible incisor teeth can be justified as an alternative to tooth preservation.
- Subjects
DENTAL extraction; PEOPLE with disabilities; DENTAL therapeutics; DENTAL care
- Publication
Dental Traumatology, 2001, Vol 17, Issue 3, p139
- ISSN
1600-4469
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1034/j.1600-9657.2001.017003139.x