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Thoracic, aortic arch and abdominal aneurysms are significant vascular conditions that can present with various clinical manifestations and lead to serious complications. Understanding these manifestations and the appropriate diagnostic studies is essential for effective management and treatment.Thoracic Aortic AneurysmsThoracic aortic aneurysms often remain asymptomatic until they reach a size that impinges on adjacent structures. They typically cause deep, diffuse chest pain that radiates to...
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Related Experiment Video

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Author Spotlight: Enhancing Dental Pulp Research with Improved Mouse Models
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Correlation between clinical and histologic pulp diagnoses.

Domenico Ricucci1, Simona Loghin1, José F Siqueira2

  • 1Private practice, Cetraro, Italy.

Journal of Endodontics
|October 15, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Clinical pulp diagnosis is reliable for normal/reversible pulpitis (96.6%) and irreversible pulpitis (84.4%), aiding treatment decisions. Further improvements in pulp diagnosis methods are still needed.

Keywords:
Clinical diagnosishistologicirreversible pulpitisreversible pulpitis

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Area of Science:

  • Dentistry
  • Oral Pathology

Background:

  • Clinicians must determine if dental pulp is savable or requires extraction.
  • Accurate pulp diagnosis is crucial for appropriate treatment planning.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To assess the reliability of clinical pulp diagnosis against histologic findings.
  • To compare clinical and histologic classifications of normal pulp, reversible pulpitis, and irreversible pulpitis.

Main Methods:

  • 95 extracted teeth were analyzed over 5 years.
  • Clinical diagnoses were compared with histologic and histobacteriologic findings.
  • Teeth were categorized as healthy, reversibly inflamed, or irreversibly inflamed.

Main Results:

  • Clinical diagnosis matched histology for normal/reversible pulpitis in 96.6% of cases.
  • Clinical diagnosis matched histology for irreversible pulpitis in 84.4% of cases.
  • Infection was present in irreversible pulpitis but absent in normal/reversibly inflamed pulps.

Conclusions:

  • Clinical and histologic classifications show good agreement, particularly for non-diseased or reversibly inflamed pulps.
  • Current diagnostic criteria effectively guide therapy in most cases.
  • Enhanced methods for reliable pulp diagnosis are still required.