Severe mixed inflammation with loss of the mandibular canal roof: a variation in odontogenic infections associated with pericoronaritis

Authors

  • Zulay Palima González Facultad de odontología de la Universidad Nacional Experimental Rómulo Gallego (UNERG) / Doctorante de la Universidad Pedagógica Experimental Libertador (UPEL) Venezuela https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0959-9879

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47606/ACVEN/MV0028

Keywords:

Infections, odontogenic, severe mixed inflammation, keratocyst, ameloblastoma, pericoronitis, excisional biopsy

Abstract

Introduction: When infections become chronic and recurrent, as can be the case with medicated pericoronitis, but not treated over and over again, they result in resistance and bacterial proliferation. There is the case of pathological tissue formations and radiographic images that guide possible diagnoses, which until they are treated by means of different techniques such as marsupialization or enucleation, with the complement of incisional or exicional biopsy that determines the type of pathology present. . This leads to the general objective: to determine the type of pathological lesion present in the angle and mandibular body associated with the ud: 48 Specific objectives: Identify the pathological lesion present in the angle and part of the mandibular body associated with the ud: 48. Sample: patient 30-year-old male, clinical case of a severe mixed inflammation, the symptoms and its radiographic findings, a possible keratocyst, dentigerous cyst or orthokeratinized odontogenic cyst was suspected, dental extraction unit: 48, removal and curettage of the surrounding tissue, Exitional biopsy taking, laboratory tests, orthopantomography, tomography, clinical photographs. Methodology: positivist paradigm, quantitative approach, non-experimental design. Field modality, case study type. The interview, the script instrument of the questions for the clinical history were the technique and the instrument. Results: severe mixed inflammation, which comes from an infection associated with recurrent pericoronitis, this by histopathological result. Conclusions: the histopathological study is what determines the final diagnosis despite the fact that the symptoms lead to possible differential diagnoses.

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Published

2020-11-09 — Updated on 2022-03-03

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How to Cite

Palima González, Z. (2022). Severe mixed inflammation with loss of the mandibular canal roof: a variation in odontogenic infections associated with pericoronaritis. Más Vita, 2(3), 90–101. https://doi.org/10.47606/ACVEN/MV0028 (Original work published November 9, 2020)

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Original Articles