AddToAny

Pulp biology

Leo Tjäderhane, Ellen Berggreen and Inge Fristad Pulp biology Leo Tjäderhane Professor, ph.d.
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Diseases, University of Helsinki, Finland; Research Unit of Oral Health Sciences, University of Oulu, and MRC, Oulu University Hospital and University of Oulu, Finland. ORCID 0000-0002-5018-478X

Ellen Berggreen

Professor, ph.d. The Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Norway. ORCID 0000-0001-6077-943X

Inge Fristad

Professor, ph.d. Department of Clinical Dentistry, University of Bergen, Norway. ORCID 0000-0002-3054-6501

Headlines

External irritation may cause symptomatic or asymptomatic pulp inflammation

Inflammation may be spatially limited, but if the irritation is not removed, will lead to progressing necrosis

Degenerative changes occur even in healthy dental pulp tissue with age

Pulpal complications of caries, extensive wear or other external irritation may result in symptomatic or asymptomatic inflammation, followed by partial or progressing the pulp tissue degradation and necrosis. Appropriate treatment of diseased pulp aim to preserve the vitality of the pulp, either completely or partially, and can thus be regarded as preventive endodontics. Understanding of the physiology and pathology of dentin-pulp complex is a prerequisite for proper diagnosis and treatment choice. This review describes the basic structure and physiology of the healthy dental pulp and the principles of the initiation and progression of inflammatory reactions in the low-compliance environment of pulp chamber and root canals. The mechanisms of pain and hypersensitivity, as well as the means that the dentin-pulp complex may react to a repeated or persistent pain-producing irritation of the vital pulp, are also discussed. The chosen treatment modalities may vary from caries excavation and cavity sealing, partial or complete pulpotomy to pulpectomy, and will be discussed in detail in other articles in this issue dealing with the diagnostics, vital pulp therapies and emergency treatment.

Even though dentin is mineralized and the pulp a loose connective tissue, they form a developmentally interdependent and functionally integrated continuum, often referred to as the dentin-pulp complex, where physiologic and pathologic reactions in one will also affect the other. Whereas dentin forms the main body of the tooth, providing support to enamel, resilience under occlusal loads, and physical protection of the pulp against microbes and other noxious substances, the pulp tissue readily reacts to the external irritation, initiating and orchestrating the defensive reactions that aim to keep the tooth functional and protect it from microbial invasion.

Dentin

Dentin is mineralized collagenous tissue, a nanocrystalline-reinforced collagen biocomposite, with 70 w-% (55 vol-%) biological hydroxyapatite (Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2) and 20 w-% (30 vol-%) organic components []. Major part of dentin is intertubular, formed by the dentin-forming odontoblasts at the dentin-pulp border. Tubular density in root dentin is lower than in coronal dentin, especially in the most apical part []. Peritubular (intratubular) dentin forms in a regular circular manner on the walls of the dentinal tubules.

Dentin-enamel junction (DEJ) provides the mechanical attachment of enamel to dentin. Together with the outermost mantle dentin with a gradual change of the mineralization rate towards the pulp, they create a 500 m resilience zone necessary to prevent fractures under high occlusal forces [].

Primary dentin formation (primary dentinogenesis) occurs during the formation and growth of the bulk of the crown and root, forming the main portion of dentin. Thereafter, dentin formation continues as secondary dentin at much slower rate throughout life, leading to gradual obliteration of the pulp chamber and root canals [].

Tertiary dentin is formed as a response to external irritation, including wear and erosion, trauma, caries, cavity preparation and chemical irritation. The growth factors and other bioactive molecules present in mineralized dentin, liberated during caries or wear, are believed to initiate and control the tertiary dentin formation []. Tertiary dentin increases the mineralized barrier thickness between external irritation and pulp tissue, aiming to retain the pulp tissue vital and non-infected. There are two kinds of tertiary dentin, namely reactionary dentin, formed by original odontoblasts, and reparative dentin, formed by newly differentiated replacement odontoblasts []. Reactionary dentin is tubular and relatively similar to secondary dentin in structure, while reparative dentin (also called fibrodentin or even calcified scar tissue [] is believed to be relatively impermeable, forming a barrier between tubular dentin and pulp tissue.

Pulp tissue and its homeostasis

Odontoblasts are the outermost cells of the pulp, forming a barrier between the pulp and dentin. This barrier may be disrupted as a response to trauma, dentin preparation or caries. Odontoblasts leave behind dentinal tubules, in which highly mineralized peritubular dentin is formed, leading to tubule occlusion that may be accelerated during external irritation [].

The dental pulp tissue is a loose connective tissue well supplied by blood vessels and nerves. The connective tissue comprises the interstitial fluid and collagen-dominated matri

Les mer

Flere saker fra Den norske tannlegeforenings Tidende

NTFs representantskap skal velge nytt hovedstyre i slutten av november. Tidende har spurt de aktuelle kandidatene om hva de ser som hovedutfordringer og hva de eventuelt vil prioritere i sitt arbeid som øverste tillitsvalgte i NTF.
Som selvstendig næringsdrivende i Norge har du ikke automatisk tjenestepensjon som ansatte har, og må derfor selv sørge for pensjonssparing. De viktigste alternativene er:
Jeg legger det ene møtet etter det andre inn i kalenderen. Redaktørforeningens høstmøte, Akademikernes høstkonferanse, NTFs landsmøte, Fagpressedagen, NTFs representantskap - og enda noen til.
I næringslivet er kontrakter mer enn bare formaliteter - de er fundamentet for tillit, struktur og rettssikkerhet.

Nyhetsbrev

Lag ditt eget nyhetsbrev:

magazines-image

Mer om mediene i Fagpressen

advokatbladet agenda-316 allergi-i-praksis appell arbeidsmanden arkitektnytt arkitektur-n astmaallergi automatisering baker-og-konditor barnehageno batmagasinet bedre-skole bioingenioren bistandsaktuelt blikkenslageren bobilverden bok-og-bibliotek bondebladet buskap byggfakta dagligvarehandelen demens-alderspsykiatri den-norske-tannlegeforenings-tidende diabetes diabetesforum din-horsel energiteknikk fagbladet farmasiliv finansfokus fjell-og-vidde fontene fontene-forskning forskerforum forskningno forskningsetikk forste-steg fotterapeuten fri-tanke frifagbevegelse fysioterapeuten gravplassen handikapnytt helsefagarbeideren hk-nytt hold-pusten HRRnett hus-bolig i-skolen jakt-fiske journalisten juristkontakt khrono kilden-kjonnsforskningno kjokkenskriveren kjottbransjen kommunal-rapport Kontekst lo-aktuelt lo-finans lo-ingenior magasinet-for-fagorganiserte magma medier24 museumsnytt natur-miljo nbs-nytt nettverk nff-magasinet njf-magasinet nnn-arbeideren norsk-landbruk norsk-skogbruk ntl-magasinet optikeren parat parat-stat politiforum posthornet psykisk-helse religionerno ren-mat samferdsel seilmagasinet seniorpolitikkno sikkerhet skog skolelederen sykepleien synkron tannhelsesekreteren Tidsskrift for Norsk psykologforening traktor transit-magasin transportarbeideren uniforum universitetsavisa utdanning vare-veger vvs-aktuelt