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Fall 2003: Volume
28, Number 1 |
|
| Pediatric
Dentistry Case Reports |
|
| Congenital defect of maxillary
primary central incisor associated with exposed pulp and gingival:
case report |
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This report describes a rare
case of hypoplastic primary incisor in which the pulp was exposed
at the crown portion and covered by the gingiva in a 1-year-11-month-old
boy. The patient was referred to us due to swelling of his labial
cervical gingiva of the maxillary right primary central incisor,
and on examination, extended to the hypoplastic labial surface.
Radiographically, there was a round radiolucent area on the crown
including the edge. Surgical removal of the swollen gingiva revealed
a large defect of the labial aspect of the incisor, showing pulpal
tissue inside. The tooth was treated by vital pulpotomy. Histopathologically, the removed gingival tissue contained many pieces of dysplastic tooth elements in the lamina propria portion which should have been connected to the exposed pulp. The findings suggested that pulp exposure resulted from focal dental hypoplasia not from resorption of the tooth. |
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| Full Text | |
| © 2007 The Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry |