TY - JOUR
T1 - The Incidence of Mechanical Allodynia in Patients With Irreversible Pulpitis
AU - Owatz, Christopher B.
AU - Khan, Asma A.
AU - Schindler, William G.
AU - Schwartz, Scott A.
AU - Keiser, Karl
AU - Hargreaves, Kenneth M.
PY - 2007/5
Y1 - 2007/5
N2 - The mechanisms of odontogenic pain are complex and incompletely understood. Cases of irreversible pulpitis are thought to represent a localized inflammatory response to bacterial challenge in dental pulp tissue. The presenting symptoms are classically defined by exaggerated painful episodes to thermal stimuli that may linger after cessation of the stimulus. However, the associated incidence of mechanical allodynia, defined as reduced mechanical pain threshold to masticatory forces, has not been characterized. This study evaluated pain intensity ratings and the presence of mechanical allodynia reported by 993 consecutive dental patients presenting for tooth extraction in a community health center. After clinical and radiographic examinations, the pulpal/periradicular diagnostic categories were normal pulp/normal periradicular (n = 792 patients), irreversible pulpitis/normal periradicular (n = 86), or irreversible pulpitis/acute periradicular periodontitis (n = 115). The rank order for the mean values of pain intensity ratings was irreversible pulpitis/acute periradicular periodontitis > irreversible pulpitis/normal periradicular > normal/normal (p < 0.05 for all comparisons). The incidence of mechanical allodynia in patients presenting with irreversible pulpitis was 57.2%, indicating that periradicular mechanical allodynia contributes to early stages of odontogenic pain because of inflammation of vital pulpal tissue.
AB - The mechanisms of odontogenic pain are complex and incompletely understood. Cases of irreversible pulpitis are thought to represent a localized inflammatory response to bacterial challenge in dental pulp tissue. The presenting symptoms are classically defined by exaggerated painful episodes to thermal stimuli that may linger after cessation of the stimulus. However, the associated incidence of mechanical allodynia, defined as reduced mechanical pain threshold to masticatory forces, has not been characterized. This study evaluated pain intensity ratings and the presence of mechanical allodynia reported by 993 consecutive dental patients presenting for tooth extraction in a community health center. After clinical and radiographic examinations, the pulpal/periradicular diagnostic categories were normal pulp/normal periradicular (n = 792 patients), irreversible pulpitis/normal periradicular (n = 86), or irreversible pulpitis/acute periradicular periodontitis (n = 115). The rank order for the mean values of pain intensity ratings was irreversible pulpitis/acute periradicular periodontitis > irreversible pulpitis/normal periradicular > normal/normal (p < 0.05 for all comparisons). The incidence of mechanical allodynia in patients presenting with irreversible pulpitis was 57.2%, indicating that periradicular mechanical allodynia contributes to early stages of odontogenic pain because of inflammation of vital pulpal tissue.
KW - Acute periradicular periodontitis
KW - incidence
KW - irreversible pulpitis
KW - mechanical allodynia
KW - pain
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U2 - 10.1016/j.joen.2007.01.023
DO - 10.1016/j.joen.2007.01.023
M3 - Article
C2 - 17437870
AN - SCOPUS:34147173346
SN - 0099-2399
VL - 33
SP - 552
EP - 556
JO - Journal of endodontics
JF - Journal of endodontics
IS - 5
ER -