Results 121 to 130 of about 2,200 (167)
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PERICORONAL RADIOLUCENCIES WITH AND WITHOUT RADIOPACITIES

Dental Clinics of North America, 1994
Pericoronal radiolucencies are common entities of the jaws that account for about 15% to 20% of all biopsy specimens. They are usually slow-growing, benign entities that involve odontogenic epithelium and the crown of a nonerupting tooth. Many lesions develop early in life and are detected during routine radiographic examination.
C S, Miller, L R, Bean
openaire   +2 more sources

Pericoronal Radiolucencies and the Significance of Early Detection

Australian Dental Journal, 2002
AbstractPericoronal radiolucencies are common radiographic findings encountered in general dental practice. They usually represent a normal or enlarged dental follicle that requires no intervention; alternatively they may represent a pathological entity that requires appropriate management and histopathological interpretation.
Farah, C., Savage, N. W.
openaire   +5 more sources

Investigations into the nature of pericoronitis

British Journal of Oral Surgery, 1965
Summary Pericoronal infection related to the mandibular third molar has been the subject of a planned investigation. The views expressed are based upon the personal examination of material from human cadavers and the detailed study of 2311 patients presenting with the condition at two dental hospitals.
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Pericoronitis and military dentistry

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1966
Abstract In military dentistry pericoronitis is one of the most frequently seen conditions which are acutely painful. Not only is this condition limited in a large degree to the mandibular third molar region, but the involved third molars are usually in a vertical position and on the same occlusal level as the second molar. Control and prevention can
openaire   +2 more sources

Etiology, Evaluation, and Treatment of Pericoronitis

Journal of Healthcare Sciences, 2022
Pericoronitis is the medical term for an oral inflammatory condition brought on by an infection of the soft tissues in proximity to the crown of an immature tooth, including gingiva and dental follicle. It is believed that microbial entry into the follicular area begins the infection once the tooth's follicle establishes contact with the oral cavity ...
Ayman Albalbisi   +11 more
openaire   +1 more source

Pain With Pericoronitis Affects Quality of Life

Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 2015
To assess the association between patients' pericoronitis pain symptoms and quality-of-life (QOL) outcomes for lifestyle and oral function.Subjects (American Society of Anesthesiologists health risk assessment level I or II) with mild symptoms of pericoronitis were enrolled in a study approved by the institutional review board and asked to complete a ...
Caitlin B L, Magraw   +6 more
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Orthodontic therapy in patients with pericoronal hamartoma

American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, 2008
Pericoronal lesions are undesirable for dental eruption, and they are always associated with unerupted teeth. Pericoronal lesions are common and are usually treated by extraction of the permanent tooth. Pericoronal hamartoma is a special type of pericoronal lesion, and little information about it is available in the orthodontic literature.
Claudia, Quintella   +5 more
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Clinical/biological outcomes of treatment for pericoronitis

Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 1996
This prospective clinical study was designed to determine the clinical and biologic outcomes of treatment for minor signs and symptoms of pericoronitis.Patients (n = 20) with all third molars, presenting consecutively to an academic clinical center for treatment of minor signs and symptoms of pericoronitis, were enrolled in the study.
G H, Blakey   +5 more
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Post-endodontic pericoronitis.

Dental update, 1993
Pericoronitis is defined as inflammation of the soft tissue around the crown of any partially erupted tooth. A case of pericoronitis with an unusual aetiology is described.
P M, McLoughlin, F, McCullagh
openaire   +1 more source

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