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13 Cards in this Set

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When dealing with missing teeth, we also like to ask questions about which other specific teeth?
-Adjacent teeth (to the missing tooth)
-Opposing teeth (to the missing tooth)
-are they supererupted? tipped? rotated? drifted? what's it's "status"?
when making plans regarding missing teeth these are 2 Q's you should deal with: 1. what is the IDEAL TREATMENT for this particular patient? 2. What are the ALTERNATIVES for this particular treatment? T/F: these 2 Q's are IRRESPECTIVE of what the pt says they may want or can afford?
TRUE! Pts must always be made aware of ideal & alternative treatment procedures---IRRESPECTIVE of what the pt says they may want/can afford.
T/F: Existing removable prostheses - removable partial or full denture must ALWAYS be SOAPed up.
TRUE! even if the pt doesn't report a problem! even if the pt says he LOVES them! even if it is evaluated to be in great shape! an EXISTING REMOVABLE prosthesis is ALWAYS listed on the Problem List & SOAPed!
Additional considerations we talked about regarded: 1. Missing Teeth. 2. Existing removable prostetics 3. Soft tissue or bony lesion 4. Teeth which may be pulpally involved 5. Restoration of individual teeth 6. Posterior resin restorations. T/F?
True.
DIAPHANOUS
TRANSPARENT; ALLOWING THE LIGHT TO SHOW TRHOUGH; DELICATE
when soaping for existing removable protesis, the OBJECTIVE section forces us to always check which 3 things?
R.E.F =
1. Esthetics: how does it look from your perspective?
2. Fit: does it sit in position without rocking?
3. Retention: how well does it resist removal?
for suspected soft tissue or bony lesion, you may have an Oral Pathology Consult. But first what must you do?
1. SOAP the problem
2. Then an Oral diagnosis Instructure or your Attending examins the lesion and reviews your SOAP
3. THEN oral pahtology consult can be obtained if still needed.
for soft tissue/bony lesion: when you are SOAPING, the OBJECTIVE part (clinical exam) should include what examinations?
1. Location
2. Size
3. Shape
4. Color
5. Surface texture
6. Consistency
7. Exacerbating factors
Most re-evals for bony lesion/soft tissue happens within how many days from initial visit?
10-14 days
which 3 things MUST YOU ASSES with teeth which may be pulpally involved when SOAPing the assessment part?
P.R.R. =
1. Pulpal diagnosis: healthy, reversible pulpitis? irreverisble? necrotic? pulpless tooth?
2. Periapical diagnosis: symptomiatic /not radicular periodontitis? abscess? normal?
3. Restorability
which should NOT be addressed in the Caries & Defective Restoration SOAP?
1. Tooth with suspected PULPAL involvement
2. Significant pathology involving a fixed partial denture or crown
3. Generalized attrition, erosion or abrasion. THESE SHOUL DBE SOAPed seperately!
what CAN be addressed int he Caries & defective restoration SOAP?
1. Small to moderate incipient, primary or recurrent Carious lesion
2. MINOR chipped teeth
3. Deep pits & fissures
4. Minor pathology (recurrent caries) involoving a FPD or crown
5. Attrition, erosion or abrasion involving one or 2 teeth
if your patient has NO caries, will you still SOAP the caries risk assesment?
YES. if your patient has TEETH, you will ALWAYS have a caries Risk assesment SOAP! You will SOAP it up under hte Problem Title "OTHER" like this:
S: see CRA form
O: see CRA form
A: low risk for caries
P: OHI, 12 month CRA recal