Abstract
The most common dental trauma during early childhood is intrusive luxation, which results in the displacement of the tooth into its alveolus. It is a severe form of dental trauma that can cause damage to the periodontal ligament, pulp, and alveolar bone. The International Association of Dental Traumatology recommends either extraction or spontaneous re-eruption of the intruded primary tooth, depending on the severity of the intrusion. This case report provides a brief insight into the management of intruded mandibular primary incisors caused by an epileptic attack in a 4-year-old boy diagnosed with refractory spastic cerebral palsy. After 6 weeks of the traumatic incident, spontaneous eruption of the intruded teeth was observed. However, the teeth were found to be mobile after 9 months of clinical and radiographic monitoring, necessitating extraction. Conservative management including waiting for spontaneous eruption with close monitoring is a treatment option for intrusive primary teeth in young children.
Metadata
Item Type: | Article |
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Creators: | Creators Email / ID Num. Abang Ibrahim, Dayang Fadzlina UNSPECIFIED Hamzah, Siti Hajar UNSPECIFIED Hussein, Alaa Sabah dr_alaasabah@yahoo.com |
Subjects: | R Medicine > RK Dentistry > Preventive dentistry > Dental health education R Medicine > RK Dentistry > Oral and dental anatomy and physiology |
Divisions: | Universiti Teknologi MARA, Selangor > Sungai Buloh Campus > Faculty of Dentistry |
Journal or Publication Title: | Compendium of Oral Science (CORALS) |
UiTM Journal Collections: | UiTM Journal > Compendium of Oral Science (CORALS) |
ISSN: | 2489-1102; 2637-0611 |
Volume: | 11 |
Number: | 2 |
Page Range: | pp. 133-141 |
Keywords: | dental trauma, intrusion, management, seizure, epilepsy |
Date: | September 2024 |
URI: | https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/104817 |