An apicoectomy is a procedure to remove infection of Dental Cavitations. For your oral and overall health, an infected cavitation must treated immediately. Once the affected tooth had been removed you should consider to replace it with a dental bridge or a dental implant and a prosthetic crown. The purpose is to preserve the function of your natural tooth.
WHAT HAPPENS IN AN APICOECTOMY ? First, local anesthesia is used to make you comfortable.
Otherwise, an alternative procedure can be attempte which may yield more lasting. Often, if the returning infection is spotted early, your dentist will choose attempt a second root canal treatment and this may clear up the infection once and for all. If the infection is more deep-seate then your dentist may recommend an apicoectomy. Possible apicoectomy complications are similar to those of the initial root canal treatment. In case of a failed apicoectomy , the tooth will have to be extracted.
Occasionally, a nonsurgical root canal procedure alone cannot save your tooth and your endodontist will recommend surgery. Read on to learn why you might need endodontic surgery and view a step-by-step explanation of the most common surgical procedure, an apicoectomy. Non-surgical retreatment following failed apicoectomy with re-use of intra-radicular restoration.
I just did an apicoectomy and simultaneous bone graft about days ago. As I have stated in previous comments, the root canal itself has to be perfect in order for an apicoectomy to be successful. You cannot cover up a bad root canal or multiple missed canals with an apicoectomy.
Simply state an apicoectomy is a surgical procedure performed by an endodontist as an alternative treatment option to a conventional root canal. Apicoectomy procedure works as long as the root canal is good. The main alternative to apicoectomy is to simply extract the tooth itself.
The tooth extraction removes the root and also allows the dentist to remove infected or inflamed tissue beneath. The extracted tooth is then replaced with a dental implant, bridge, or denture. Talk with your dentist about the potential risks of your apicoectomy.
Alternative Therapy: If an apicoectomy is indicate you do not have many alternatives. You may extract the tooth, redo the root canal in the traditional manner described previously, or wait a few weeks or months to see if the tooth responds positively without treatment. The tooth might feel different on biting and your dentist might tell you to live with it, but if you had cancer, would you want to “live with it? Root canal retreatment is usually a painful waste of time and an apicoectomy (surgically removing the cyst) does not address the bacteria living in the micro-tubules. When an apicoectomy is recommended to a patient, he or she should ask what the alternatives are, and what kind of pain levels and healing time to expect.
When left untreate infected roots can damage other teeth, spread infection, and cause regression of the jawbone. In such cases, a better alternative is to treat infection from the root end of the tooth (instead of the crown end) with an apicoectomy. A small filling is placed at the end of the root canal to seal the canal and prevent further infection.
A stitch is placed to close the gum tissue.
It is a surgical procedure in which the tip of the root of the tooth is removed. It comes from the word “apico” meaning end or apex and “ectomy” meaning removal. This is a surgical dental treatment, performed on teeth that do not settle after root canal treatment.
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