Login / Signup

Successful retreatment of a maxillary central incisor with a wide-open apex using MTA to fill the entire canal: 24-year follow-up.

Juan Domingo Saavedra FelipeVirginia Andrea Watson MolinaAnabell Bologna EscalonaRafael Laplana MartínezAitzol AresoVenkateshbabu NagendrababuFrancesc Abella Sans
Published in: Australian endodontic journal : the journal of the Australian Society of Endodontology Inc (2024)
Managing teeth with open apices can be a challenging scenario for clinicians. This case report describes the 24-year follow-up of a maxillary central incisor that failed to develop after a traumatic injury resulting in a wide-open apex. A 10-year-old girl presented complaining of discomfort in her upper teeth. Tooth #9 had received a traumatic blow several years before and was discoloured with a resin composite restoration on the mesio-incisal edge. The tooth was painful to percussion and palpation. An inadequate root canal filling and incomplete root formation were observed on the initial periapical radiograph. Root canal retreatment was initiated, and the canal filled entirely with mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) because of the extremely wide canal and open apex. The patient was asymptomatic at the 24-year follow-up with the cone beam computed tomography and periapical radiographs demonstrating the stability of the MTA.
Keyphrases
  • cone beam computed tomography
  • minimally invasive
  • case report
  • spinal cord injury
  • palliative care