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Lower third molar inclusion associated with paraesthesia: A case report

Authors :
Stefan-Ioan Stratul
Alexandra Roman
Marius Boariu
Petra Surlin
Fabio Scotto
Pasquale Sammartino
Sorina Solomon
Alessandro Espedito di Lauro
Darian Rusu
Roberta Gasparro
Di Lauro, Alessandro Espedito
Boariu, Mariu
Sammartino, Pasquale
Scotto, Fabio
Gasparro, Roberta
Stratul, Stefan-Ioan
Rusu, Darian
Roman, Alexandra
Surlin, Petra
Solomon, Sorina
Source :
Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Spandidos Publications, 2021.

Abstract

When lower third molar inclusion is associated with neurosensorial complications, the treatment of choice is its surgical avulsion. One of these complications, that may be the most alarming during a first medical examination, is hemi-lip paraesthesia, that can appear in the presence of several mandibular lesions. This is a report of a rare clinical case in which paraesthesia was linked to the closeness between the root block of the dental element and the mandibular canal, which houses the neurovascular trunk of the lower mandibular nerve. A 64 year-old male Caucasian patient, presented with the chief complaint of past periodic inflammatory events in the retromolar region of the oral cavity and hemi-lip paraesthesia. Upon local clinical and radiological examination, a lower left third molar with class 3 position C inclusion was incriminated. The medical history of the patient revealed well compensated diabetes mellitus type II, and pharmacologically controlled hypertension. The tooth was surgically removed using piezoelectric instruments. Before and after surgery, three types of tests (tactile, pain and thermal sensitivity) were carried out to delimit the area affected by paraesthesia. At 7 days, the area of hypoesthesia of the hemi-lip was significantly reduced. Further improvement in tactile and thermal sensitivity occurred in subsequent follow-up, at 1 and 3 months, postoperatively. This clinical case demonstrates that the surgical intervention performed with piezoelectric instruments prevented the damage of an important structure such as the lower mandibular nerve, and promoted regression of a contingent paraesthesia.

Details

ISSN :
17921015 and 17920981
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....470477710e05df1987c096f738546147
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3892/etm.2021.10258