Teeth
Tooth Fracture
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Tooth Fracture
, Fractured Teeth, Dental Fracture, Broken Tooth
See Also
Tooth Avulsion
Tooth Luxation
Dental Trauma
Definitions
Tooth Fracture
Broken Tooth affecting any portion of tooth (root or crown)
Symptoms
Pain at affected tooth
Types
Root
Fracture
Difficult to diagnose without dental expertise and imaging
Typically treated as
Tooth Luxation
Tooth
splinter line or crack line
Asymptomatic in most cases
Amenable to cosmetic restoration
Longterm risk of future affected tooth problems
Crown
Fracture
Enamel
Fracture
(Ellis Type 1)
Remaining tooth white or opaque
Painless to air and water
Amenable to cosmetic restoration
Dentin extension (Ellis Type 2)
Remaining tooth demonstrates brown or yellow coloration
Sensitive to air and water, as well as hot and cold
Apply
Calcium
hydroxide to the
Fracture
site
Dental referral for permanent restoration
Pulpal space extension (Ellis Type 3)
Remaining tooth is pink, red or bleeding
Rinse the tooth with saline to isolate the bleeding source (tooth vs
Gingiva
)
Apply
Calcium
hydroxide to the
Fracture
site
Treat with
Antibiotic
s (
Penicillin VK
) and
NSAID
s
Referral to dentist within 24 hours
Root canal needed in some cases
Management
Gene
ral
Keep tooth fragments hydrated
See a dentist as soon as possible (typically within 24 hours, especially Ellis Type 3 pulpal space extensions)
Management
Tooth Fracture Dressing
Dressing may reduce pain and reduce infection risk
However, dressing may not prevent pulp necrosis or infection
Technique
Moisten exposed dentin and pulp, while keeping remaining tooth dry
Apply a damp gauze to surface
Mix together dental cement (e.g.
Calcium
hydroxide)
Combine 1-2 mm each of catalyst and base on a mixing pad
Mix for 15 seconds until consistent color
Alternatives: Light-Cured Composites are typically used by dentists
Apply a thin layer (0.5 mm thick) onto exposed dentin and pulp surface
Keep the region dry for at least 60 seconds
Lip and
Tongue
held away from surface
Local gauze roll can absorb
Saliva
Confirm cement hardened
Light pressure to cement should not leave an indent
References
Warrington (2022) Crit Dec Emerg Med 36(5): 15
References
Broderick and Deak (2015) Crit Dec Emerg Med 29(1): 2-8
Claudius, Behar and Trahini in Herbert (2015) EM:Rap 15(5): 5-7
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