Online Encyclopedia of Dental Trauma

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Paul AbbottProf.
Access to the course is not limited in time
You can buy the entire course now at the new price - $19, instead of the old one - $349
Course program
Online Encyclopedia of Dental Trauma
9 online lessons

Paul Abbott's course on dental trauma is a set of structured lectures filled with scientifically based information with a demonstration of vivid clinical cases.

You will receive diagnostic protocols, first aid and treatment of dental trauma and soft tissue injuries.


You will also learn:

– The reaction of teeth and oral tissues to injury
– Protocols for the diagnosis and treatment of external and internal resorption
– General principles of treatment of dental and oral tissue injuries
– The use of local and systemic medications
– Principles of emergency care for various injuries of the maxillofacial region.
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You can buy the entire course now at the new price - $19, instead of the old one - $349
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1. What Happens When Following Dental and Oral Injuries. Introductory lesson
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

A. Responses of the Dental and Oral Tissues to Injury
B. Factors Affecting Healing of the Dental and Oral Tissues following Trauma

– Common dental and oral traumatic injuries
– Potential consequences of the various injuries to the teeth and oral tissues including the long-term prognosis for each tissue
– Different healing responses of the pulp, peri-radicular and soft tissues following trauma
– Factors that affect the healing of these tissues following trauma
– Management plans to minimise the consequences of trauma to the teeth.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 29 min
2. What Happens When Following Dental and Oral Injuries
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

A. Responses of the Dental and Oral Tissues to Injury
B. Factors Affecting Healing of the Dental and Oral Tissues following Trauma

– Common dental and oral traumatic injuries
– Potential consequences of the various injuries to the teeth and oral tissues including the long-term prognosis for each tissue
– Different healing responses of the pulp, peri-radicular and soft tissues following trauma
– Factors that affect the healing of these tissues following trauma
– Management plans to minimise the consequences of trauma to the teeth.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 3 min
3. Tooth Resorption and Dental Trauma
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

A. General Principles and Classification of Resorption
B. External Surface Resorption
C. Ankylosis
D. External Replacement Resorption
E. External Inflammatory Resorption – Part 1

– Different types of external tooth resorption that are associated with trauma to the teeth
– Pathogenesis of the different types of external tooth resorption related to trauma
– Factors that predispose teeth to external tooth resorption during and after trauma to the tooth
– Ankylosis and its relationship to trauma and the different types of external resorption
– Diagnosis and management of external surface resorption
– Difference between external replacement resorption and external inflammatory resorption
– Diagnosis and management of external replacement resorption
– Strategies to reduce the chances of external replacement resorption occurring following trauma to a tooth.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 52 min
4. External Inflammatory Resorption
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

A. Preventive Management
B. Interceptive Management

– Pathogenesis of external inflammatory resorption related to trauma
– Pathogenesis of external inflammatory resorption when related to long-standing infected root canal systems
– Diagnosis and management of external inflammatory resorption
– Strategies to prevent external inflammatory resorption following specific injuries to the teeth, including when root canal treatment should be commenced
– Strategies to manage external inflammatory resorption when it is already present - i.e. the interceptive management of this resorption
– Long-term prognosis of teeth that have had external inflammatory resorption.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 17 min
5. General Principles for Managing Traumatic Dental Injuries
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

– General principles for managing trauma to the teeth and oral tissues
– Key elements of the examination and assessment of patients following trauma to the teeth and oral region
– Importance of pulp sensibility tests and radiographs following trauma to the teeth
– Different types of splints used to stabilize the teeth and the alveolar bone following trauma
– Indications for the use of the different types of splints and their duration of use
– Options available for emergency management of pulp exposures, especially with a view to preservation of the pulp
– Management of post-operative discomfort/pain following the initial management of traumatic dental injuries
– The use of systemic and local medications following trauma to the teeth and oral region
– The importance of, and the need for, follow-ups for patients who have had trauma to the teeth and oral region
– The follow-up schedule following trauma to the teeth and oral region.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 30 min
6. Emergency Management of Specific Traumatic Dental Injuries
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

A. Fractures: Crown fractures, Crown-root fractures
B. Concussion and Subluxation
C. Extrusion and Lateral Luxation
D. Intrusion and Avulsion

– The emergency management of specific injuries to the teeth and oral tissues
– Management of crown and crown-root fractures in the emergency situation
– Management of tooth concussion and subluxation injuries
– Methods to reposition teeth that have been extruded, laterally luxated and intruded
– The emergency management of teeth following extrusion and lateral luxation
– The options for management of intruded teeth in the emergency setting along with the advantages and disadvantages of each option
– The emergency management of avulsed teeth
– The medium-term and long-term follow-up management for these injuries
– Prognosis for teeth following each of the above injuries.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 30 min
7. Assessment and Management of Transverse Root Fractures
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

– New classification for transverse root fractures
– Various responses to transverse root fractures
– Prognosis for teeth following transverse root fractures according to the position of the fracture
– The immediate management of teeth that have had a transverse root fracture
– The endodontic management protocols for teeth that develop pulp necrosis and infection of the root canal system following a transverse root fracture.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 23 min
8. Management of Incompletely Developed Teeth
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

– Importance of pulp preservation in teeth with incompletely developed roots
– The situations where immature teeth may become pulpless and infected
– Three management options for pulpless, infected immature teeth
– Advantages and disadvantages of the three management options for pulpless, infected immature teeth
– Healing responses following treatment with the three options.
– Whether calcium hydroxide has any detrimental effects on tooth strength
– Appropriate management option for the various situations where immature teeth have become pulpless and infected
– Treatment outcomes and prognosis for teeth treated via the three management options for immature teeth, especially the longer-term prognosis.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 1 h 46 min
9. Assessment and management of Internal Resorption of Teeth
Here you can watch a five-minute fragment of the lesson
Lesson program:

– Three types of internal resorption of teeth
– Aetiology and pathogenesis of the different types of internal resorption
– How to differentially diagnose the three types of internal resorption
- Management of each type of internal resorption
– Outcomes of treatment of internal inflammatory resorption
– Prognosis for teeth with each type of internal resorption.

Recommended for: Therapists, Endodontists, Maxillofacial surgeons, General dentists.
Duration: 59 min
Special offer
Paul AbbottProf.
Online Encyclopedia of Dental Trauma
Access to the course is unlimited in time!
$19 $349
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