Dental abscess: Difference between revisions

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| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Periodontal'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Periodontal'''
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| Other Names||*Tooth abscess, dentoalveolar abscess, apical abscess, endodontic abscess, and lesion of endodontic origin||*Gingival *Pericoronal *lateral (periodontal) abscess
| Other Names||Tooth abscess, dentoalveolar abscess, apical abscess, endodontic abscess, and lesion of endodontic origin||Gingival, pericoronal *lateral (periodontal) abscess
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| Epidemiology||More common||Less common
| Epidemiology||More common||Less common

Revision as of 22:56, 2 December 2021

Background

Chronic apical periodontitis (with arrows).jpg
  • Associated with dental caries or nonviable teeth
  • Significant erosion of the pulp with bacterial overgrowth

Periapical vs Periodontal Abscess

Category Periapical Periodontal
Other Names Tooth abscess, dentoalveolar abscess, apical abscess, endodontic abscess, and lesion of endodontic origin Gingival, pericoronal *lateral (periodontal) abscess
Epidemiology More common Less common
Area Associated with a nonvital dead tooth (i.e. pulpitis) Associated with a vital (living) tooth
Cause Tooth infection Gum infection

Clinical Features

Abscess originating from a tooth that has spread to the buccal space. Above: deformation of the cheek on the second day. Below: deformation on the third day.
A decayed, broken down tooth, which has undergone pulpal necrosis. A periapical abscess (i.e. around the apex of the tooth root) has then formed and pus is draining into the mouth via an intraoral sinus (gumboil)
  • Acute pain, swelling, and mild tooth elevation
  • Exquisite sensitivity to percussion or chewing on the involved tooth
  • Swelling in surrounding gingiva, buccal, lingual or palatal regions
  • May see small white pustule (parulis) in gingival surface characteristic for abscesses

Differential Diagnosis

Dentoalveolar Injuries

Odontogenic Infections

Other

Evaluation

CT scan showing a large left tooth abscess with significant inflammation of fatty tissue under the skin.
  • Clinical evaluation
  • Radiographs

Management

  • Analgesia with NSAIDs, opioids and/or local anesthetics
  • Dental follow-up within 48 hrs.
  • Emergent oral surgeon follow-up if complicated (Ludwig's angina, Lemierre's syndrome)

Antibiotics

Treatment is broad and focused on polymicrobial infection

I&D

  • Can be performed in ED depending on provider comfort or by a dental consultant

Procedure

  • 11 or 12 blade stab incision
  • Hemostat blunt dissection +/- packing

See Also

References

  • ER Atlas