General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . Fig. 342.—Result of poulticing the face in connection with acute dentoalveolar abscesses (Oakman). It is rare that teeth abutting against the floor of the antrumhave not a thin lamina of bone between the apices of the roots 3ibid. ACUTE APICAL DENTOALVEOLAR ABSCESS 429 and the mucoperiosteuni of the sinus. If a tooth suspected ofbeing the cause of an involvement of the sinus should be extractedand no opening should be found leading into the sinus, it is noevidence


General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . Fig. 342.—Result of poulticing the face in connection with acute dentoalveolar abscesses (Oakman). It is rare that teeth abutting against the floor of the antrumhave not a thin lamina of bone between the apices of the roots 3ibid. ACUTE APICAL DENTOALVEOLAR ABSCESS 429 and the mucoperiosteuni of the sinus. If a tooth suspected ofbeing the cause of an involvement of the sinus should be extractedand no opening should be found leading into the sinus, it is noevidence thai such a tootli was not at fault. The infectious proc-ess may have established a microscopic opening undiagnosableby instrumentation. Teeth rarely discharge upon the lingual aspect of the mandible,because of the greater thickness of bone between the apical areasof the teeth and the lingual aspect of the mandible, than towardthe labial side. A dentoalveolar abscess in connection with anyone of the lower teeth may point externally, gravity beingto some extent a factor in deciding upon that course of the infec


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpathology, bookyear19