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CompletedNCT03845426

Factors Affecting the Pulpal Prognosis of Injured Teeth

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
25 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Edinburgh · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Factors affecting the pulpal prognosis of injured teeth. Dental injuries may affect the survival of teeth. It is recommended to monitor the injured teeth at regular intervals to ensure that the appropriate treatment is delivered promptly. In order to conclude what treatment is required, a correct diagnosis must be reached. However, reaching this diagnosis can be difficult as injured teeth often respond erroneously to many of the diagnostic tests used, thereby affecting our ability to interpret the results. This study aims to identify the clinical factors that affect the ability of the blood supply of a tooth to survive an injury. This will help ensure that patients are provided with the appropriate treatment with the avoidance of delays that may affect the long-term survival of the tooth. Patients that attend the Edinburgh Dental Institute trauma clinic will be invited to participate in this study. The patients, seen on this clinic, are assessed in regular intervals in a systematic way, as per accepted and validated international guidelines on the subject of dental trauma. There are specific investigations and clinical assessments that are carried out on the initial and each review appointment. The study will attempt to identify those teeth that lose their vitality at different points following the injury and will attempt to link this to the nature of the injury suffered. The data will be collected from the patients' routine dental trauma assessment and no additional investigations will be required. As per routine practice the patients are reviewed for one year following their injury unless otherwise indicated. All responses to the investigations will be collected and combined to identify the prognostic factors associated with the loss of vitality of traumatised teeth.

Detailed description

Dento-alveolar trauma may affect the quality of life of patients and the long term prognosis of the teeth. Following dental trauma regular monitoring and follow up of the teeth is required to ensure that the appropriate treatment is delivered promptly. Although there is information in the literature focused on child and adolescent dental trauma, there is limited information regarding traumatised permanent teeth. Permanent teeth have differing healing capacity after injury and this is dependent on the degree of root formation. During the initial assessment of patients that have suffered from dental trauma, negative responses to investigations assessing the health of the vasculature might lead clinicians to initiate unnecessary and irreversible treatment on traumatised teeth. Equally false positive results might delay treatment which might have an effect on the outcome, leading to the development of healing complications such as infection and root resorption. By collecting and analysing the clinical factors, we aim to identify which of aspects of the assessment might influence the prognoses of the teeth.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERRoot canal treatment.Once pulpal necrosis has been diagnosed, root canal treatment will be carried out by the patient's general practitioner. This is an end point for the tooth in the study.

Timeline

Start date
2019-02-25
Primary completion
2020-02-01
Completion
2020-03-01
First posted
2019-02-19
Last updated
2020-06-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03845426. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.