General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . ir permanent successors; the oc-casional treatment of the fissures of the molars with silver nitrate,if supplemented by the thorough brushing of the teeth upon ris-ing, after each meal, and upon retiring, will greatly reduce theprevalence of caries. And ipso facto the involvement of the pulp,its death by suppuration or putrefaction or both, and the spread-ing of the infectious process to the peridental tissues, will like-wise be circumvented. Etiology of Septic Ap
General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . ir permanent successors; the oc-casional treatment of the fissures of the molars with silver nitrate,if supplemented by the thorough brushing of the teeth upon ris-ing, after each meal, and upon retiring, will greatly reduce theprevalence of caries. And ipso facto the involvement of the pulp,its death by suppuration or putrefaction or both, and the spread-ing of the infectious process to the peridental tissues, will like-wise be circumvented. Etiology of Septic Apical Pericementitis The causes of septic apical pericementitis may be enumeratedas bacteria and bacterial products which have invaded the peri-apical tissues proceeding from the root canal inwardly (Figs. 416 DENTAL PATHOLOGY 329-334). They are a combination of the pyogenic organisms?which have been instrumental in destroying the pulp, and thesaprophytic organisms which may follow in their wake; and tothese must be added the products of nitrogenous peridental membrane is infected by continuity from the in-. Fig. 329.—Chronic dentoalveolar abscessof an upper lateral incisor with a largearea of rarefaction. The infectious proc-ess involved an adjacent tooth on eachside. An incompletely tilled root canalwas evidently the cause of the continuedinfection.
Size: 1478px × 1690px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpathology, bookyear19