3.8 Review

Treatment of dental dilacerations: narrative review

Journal

DENTAL CADMOS
Volume 89, Issue 3, Pages 174-178

Publisher

EDIZIONI EDRA
DOI: 10.19256/d.cadmos.03.2021.04

Keywords

Dilacerated dental elements; Dilaceration; Orthodontic treatment; Impacted teeth; Dental trauma

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The article reviewed the literature on dental dilaceration, focusing on epidemiology, etiology, diagnosis, and therapeutic options. A total of 31 relevant articles were included in the review, with emphasis placed on advanced imaging techniques for correct diagnosis and treatment planning. The study suggests that combined orthodontic-surgical options are the best treatment for dilacerated teeth, and ethnicity does not influence therapeutic options.
OBJECTIVES The term dilacerated refers to a dental element that has an alteration of the axial inclination of the crown with respect to the root. Dilaceration can occur at the crownroot junction with deformation of the cemento-enamel junction, or it can be present anywhere along the surface of the root and includes any axial modification during the process of formation of the root itself. The purpose of this article is to describe a review of the literature on dental dilaceration, presenting epidemiology, etiology, diagnosis and therapeutic options. MATERIALS AND METHODS The review was conducted through the following electronic databases: Medline database, PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library. Articles between 1970 and 2017 were selected. Using the limits option, only articles in English re- ferring to Humans were considered. Articles referring to a non-dentistry topic and those published before 1970 were not considered. Articles regarding etiology, diagnosis and treatment were included. Two of the authors were responsible for the non-blind selection of the articles. Disagreements were resolved by discussion or by the involvement of another reviewer. The extracted data were collected on the following elements: magazine and year of publication, study design, therapeutic results, ethnicity and author's conclusions RESULTS The search strategy resulted in 390 articles. Two hundred and seven articles were selected from that database. Then, 156 articles were deemed to be irrelevant on the basis of the study's abstract, title and design and were excluded. Full texts of 51 articles were read to exclude further irrelevant studies. Only 31 met the inclusion criteria. CONCLUSIONS The main issue is diagnosis. The first level imaging for diagnosis are periapical radiographs and orthopantomography. In case of dilacerated elements in vestibular position, an occlusal radiography can be used. As confirmed in the literature, a study conducted on maxillary dental elements, CT has a significantly greater specificity and sensitivity than conventional radiographs and therefore represents the technique of choice as a second level imaging. Advanced imaging techniques are an essential requirement for correct diagnosis and for planning surgical access and positioning of the ligature, as well as for defining the optimal and efficient path for extrusion into the oral cavity, which avoids or minimizes collateral damage by using intraoral anchorage aid such as the rapid maxillary expander or skeletal anchorage (miniplates or miniscrews). This study suggests that combined orthodontic-surgical options for dilacerated teeth is the best treatment option. There is no evidence in which way ethnicity may influence therapeutic options. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE The problem of retained teeth in orthodontics has been studied for many years to try to guide clinicians in choosing the least invasive and most effective treatment possible. The methods presented are, net of the available evidence, the most suitable in the management of these problems.

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