The Anatomy, Physiology and Morphology of Teeth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Anatomy, Physiology and Morphology of Teeth

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... to hydrodynamic stimuli C-fibres respond to the inflammatory mediators Pheripheral sensory nerves produce pain = hyperalgesia Peripheral sensory nerves ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Anatomy, Physiology and Morphology of Teeth


1
The Anatomy, Physiology and Morphology of Teeth
  • By Dr. Juliana Mathews

2
Tooth Anatomy
  • The crown
  • consists of enamel, dentine and pulp
  • The root
  • has a root canal with blood vessels and nerves
  • covered by cementum and held together by
    periodontal fibres
  • embedded in the alveolar bone
  • Enamel
  • white hard covering over the crown of the tooth
  • no nerve or blood supply
  • cannot heal or repair like bone or dentine
  • Dentine
  • covered by enamel on the crown and cementum on
    the roots
  • protects the pulp

3
Tooth Anatomy continued
  • Pulp
  • Consists of nerves, blood vessels and connective
    tissue
  • Found in pulp chamber and root canal
  • Anastomoses between venules and arterioles
  • Cementum
  • Covers the dentine of the root
  • Attached to the periodontal ligament
  • No nerve supply

4
Tooth Anatomy continued
  • Periodontium
  • Alveolar process bony extensions of the maxilla
    and mandible that support teeth
  • Cortical Plate dense outer layer of bone
    covering the spongy (cancellous) bone
  • Periodontal ligament
  • Periodontal fibres attach the roots to the
    alveolar bone
  • has a nerve and blood supply
  • provides an elastic cushion between the tooth and
    bone
  • Gingiva covers the teeth and the alveolar
    process


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6
Root Canal System
  • Pulp chamber is found on the coronal part of the
    tooth
  • Reduces in size with age due to secondary dentine
    due to physiological or pathological reasons
  • Orifices to the root canal are found on the floor
    of the pulp chamber
  • Canals taper towards the apex
  • The narrowest part of the canal is found at the
    apical constriction, which opens out as the
    apical foramen and exists to one side i.e.
    0.5mm-1mm from the anatomical apex
  • New layers of cementum are constantly being laid
    down, therefore the centre of the foramina
    deviates from the apical centre
  • Lateral canals can develop between the main body
    of the root canal and the periodontal ligament
    space
  • Accessory canals can develop in the apical region
    forming the apical delta
  • Lateral and Accessory canals develop due to a
    break in the Hertwigs epithelial root sheath or
    during the development, the sheath grows around
    the existing blood vessel
  • Lateral canals can be impossible to instrument
    and can compromise obturation

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9
Root canal system continued
  • Some roots can have more than one canal and they
    dont always merge
  • Single rooted teeth that have a single canal can
    end in a single foramen. Some have an apical
    delta and have a single canal but many exits
  • Multi- rooted teeth commonly have multiple
    foramina and each root can have two or three
    canals. Some canals merge before their exit and
    some can leave the root independently
  • Eg. Some maxillary second premolars can have two
    roots (usually are single rooted) or a single
    root with 2 canals
  • Eg. The mesio-buccal root of the maxillary first
    molar can have two canals (usually one canal
    present)

10
The complexity of the root canal
11
Physiology of the Dental Pulp
  • Nerve fibres
  • consist of sensory (afferent) fibres, sympathetic
    fibres and parasympathetic fibres
  • sensory fibres pass through the apical foramen
    and end at the peripheral pulp
  • sensory nerve fibres originate from the
    trigeminal ganglion
  • C fibres
  • Unmyelinated, high threshold fibres responding to
    mechanical, thermal or chemical stimulation
  • Dull, poor localized pain
  • A- delta fibres
  • myelinated, low threshold mechano- receptors
  • sharp localized pain
  • A-beta fibres

12
Pain
  • Inflammation of pulp develops
  • Increased pulpal pressure against the sensory
    nerve endings
  • Sensitized nerves release neuropeptides and cause
    inflammation Neurogenic inflammation
  • A-delta fibres respond to hydrodynamic stimuli
  • C-fibres respond to the inflammatory mediators
  • Pheripheral sensory nerves produce pain
    hyperalgesia
  • Peripheral sensory nerves sprout/branch in the
    inflammed area but disappear as the inflammation
    subside
  • Central sensitization occurs when there is a flow
    of continuous pain impulses which can occur in
    acute and chronic states

13
The Innervation of Teeth
  • Trigeminal Nerve (CN V)
  • Three sensory branches
  • Opthalmic branch supplies the orbit and forehead
  • Maxillary branch supplies the maxillary sinus and
    upper jaw teeth
  • Mandibular branch supplies the tongue and the
    lower jaw teeth
  • Facial Nerve (CN VII)
  • Motor and sensory branches
  • Innervates
  • muscles of facial expression
  • taste buds of the anterior 2/3 of the tongue
  • salivary glands

14
Innervation of Teeth continued
  • Maxillary Teeth
  • Anterior superior alveolar nerve upper incisors
    and canines (CNV2)
  • Middle superior alveolar nerve upper premolars
    and the mesio-buccal root of the maxillary first
    molar (CNV2)
  • Posterior superior alveolar nerve upper molars
    except the mesio-buccal root of the maxillary
    first molar (CNV2)
  • Mandibular Teeth
  • Inferior alveolar nerve mandibular teeth,
    gingiva and lower lip unilaterally (CNV3)
  • Lingual nerve anterior 2/3 of tongue and mucosa
    of the floor of the mouth (CNV3)
  • Buccal nerve gingiva on the buccal side of
    posterior teeth (CNV3)

15
The Branches of the Trigeminal Nerve
16
Blood supply
  • Maxillary teeth
  • Superior alveolar artery anterior, middle and
    posterior branch (Maxillary Artery)
  • Mandibular teeth
  • Inferior alveolar artery (Maxillary Artery)

17
Tooth Morphology
  • Please look the additional notes for this
    section

18
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