Unexpected formation of root-like structures subsequent to the avulsion of immature permanent teeth: Case report.
Giselle Emilãine da Silva ReisJuliana Feltrin de SouzaDenis Emílio Nascimento SantosJose Vitor Nogara Borges de MenezesFabian Calixto FraizAna Claúdia Galvão de Aguiar KoubikYasmine Mendes PupoPublished in: Dental traumatology : official publication of International Association for Dental Traumatology (2021)
This report describes the unexpected formation of root-like structures following the avulsion of immature permanent teeth without replantation. A 6-year-old female patient had avulsed the four permanent mandibular incisors and the two deciduous mandibular canines. The patient was seen in an emergency healthcare unit but did not receive specialized treatment for tooth replantation. As follow-up treatment, she received a removable prosthesis. After 4 years of follow-up, an image obtained by panoramic radiography showed formations similar to four root structures in the alveolus of the previously avulsed permanent teeth. This finding was confirmed by periapical radiography and computed tomography. This case report demonstrates that in teeth with incomplete root development, even after avulsion without replantation, cells from the pulp stump may have the capacity to form mineralized structures that appear radiographically comparable to root dentin.