Vertical Root Fracture

In this post I’m going to talk about vertical fractures regarding a case I had a few months ago, the one on the right picture. This maxillary first premolar was ready to get a root canal therapy but presented a mesiodistally vertical coronal fracture that continued to the furca which divided the tooth in two roots, bucal and palatal. The tooth had an old restoration on the distal side that was not in occlusion and that probably let the fracture appear on the mesial area where you can see the line fracture. The tooth was also sensitive to vertical percussion and had some mobility, however, there wasn’t significant evidence or bone loss on the radiographic tests.

Most of the vertical fractures are due to excessive concentration of loading over some areas of the root canal. Studies have shown that the curvature of the root canal seems more important than the external morphology of the root, in terms of stress concentration, the remaining thin dentin increases the magnitude but not the direction of the stress generated by forces. In fact as thinner the mesiodistal dentin walls are, the concentration of forces on the lingual and bucal walls increase the risk of fracture in this direction contrary to what one might think at first, more dentin thickness the harder it is to break in that direction, well… it is not like that.

There are three factors that determine the distribution and direction of forces, a) the anatomy of the root canal, b) the anatomy of the root, c) the thickness of the dentin. The canal anatomy seems to be the most important factor determining the distribution of forces.

The vertical fractures most often occur in premolars, both maxillary and mandibular, followed by fractures on the mesial root of mandibular molars and central incisors.

One of the biggest problems we find in cases of vertical fractures is that they aren’t easy to diagnose. Most symptoms usually appear years after the fracture. We may well find, sensitivity to percussion and vertical palpation, presence of fistula, or a large and isolated periodontal pocket that doesn’t correspond to a general periodontitis. Radiologically we can observe a radiolucent area with horizontal bone loss along the affected root.

fractura verticalDiagnosis vertical fractures are a challenge for the dentist because the symptoms are similar to a failed root canal treatment and usually radiographic test doesn’t show evidence of a fracture clearly. Another problem in endodontically treated teeth is often the filling materials doesn’t allow us to see the fracture line on the radiograph as they’re in the same plane. Patients may experience anxiety to thinking that the endodontic treatment is not working when, in fact, the problem is a fracture prior or post to the root canal treatment.

PhD. MSc. Dr. Pablo Salmeron.

Microscope hands on course in your own practice

brochure hands on
I would like to introduce you this course I teach about the use of the microscope in your own practice. This course is recommended for those dentist who own a microscope (the brand doesn’t matter) and want to improve their technical skills with it.

The course takes place in your own practice with your own team and assistants, in your own space and with your own patients, so you will be able to maximize the use of the microscope making a pleasant working experience.

You can only treat what you see.

PhD. MSc. Dr. Pablo Salmeron.

Ápice triple en un primer premolar superior.

apice triple

En este caso que os presento podéis ver como el ápice se divide en tres conductos pequeños. La imagen radiolúcida alrededor de la raíz es muy característica en este tipo de casos y antes de obturar nos da una pista de la morfología del ápice.

Equipos y material que he utilizado para este caso:

– Microscopio Labomed DNT.

– Sistema de limas Mtwo de VDW.

– Sistema de obturación System B de gutapercha caliente. Imprescindible para obturar estas morfologías.

Espero que os haya gustado.

PhD. MSc. Dr. Pablo Salmeron.