Monday, January 26, 2026

Fractured Logic: The Danger of Diagnosing Before Diagnosing

 Proper diagnosis is so crucial to treatment planning.  A necrotic pulp with an enormous, alveolar bony defect - even with lateral bone loss - is not indicative of root fracture.  It is a possibility, but if the tooth has never had RCT before - I do not assume a root fracture.  EVEN if the bone loss is extensive.  Here's a great example.  6 months healing on a tooth that could easily be considered non-restorable.

#30 was first seen in 2021 and no tx recommended.

Pt returns in July 2025 with necrotic #30 and large apical lucency


CBCT shows a floating distal root.  This would be easy to assume the root is fractured and not treatable OR that perio status would be poor...

RCT completed July 2025

6 Month Recall!!!!

Check out that furcal bone healing!

Check out that distal bone healing.  No root fracture or perio issues.




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