Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors

Third molar surgery is the most common surgical procedure in the oral cavity. Whenever extraction is indicated, careful planning based on clinical and radiographic examinations is essential to guard against postoperative complications like: bleeding, alveolitis, infections, injury to adjacent teeth, oroantral communications, or even mandibular fractures. Although rare, the risk of postoperative mandibular fractures after third molar impaction surgery is related to some factors. Our case report a 50-year-old white female patient with a complaint of pain in the region of the left mandibular angle and stated that three weeks before she had the left mandibular third molar extracted, which computerized tomographic confirmed the presence of a fracture in the mandibular angle. However, our report contributes to showing the predisposing factors to cause this injury after a review of the literature, showing the clinician what they should take like consideration when they indicate the extraction of third molars. To avoid this complication, factors like bony impaction, depth of tooth within bone, proximity to the inferior dental canal, tooth position in relation to adjacent teeth, the presence of root dilacerations and others must be taken into account. A case of late mandibular fracture that occurred 21 days after third molar extraction is reported. Conservative treatment was adopted and after six-months of radiographic and clinical follow-up, the patient had fully preserved mandibular function, normal occlusion and no discomfort.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrade,Valdir Cabral, Neto,Patrício José de Oliveira, de Moraes,Márcio, Asprino,Luciana
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad de La Frontera. Facultad de Medicina 2013
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-381X2013000200019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S0718-381X2013000200019
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S0718-381X20130002000192013-11-04Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing FactorsAndrade,Valdir CabralNeto,Patrício José de Oliveirade Moraes,MárcioAsprino,Luciana third molar extraction Mandibular fracture late complication Third molar surgery is the most common surgical procedure in the oral cavity. Whenever extraction is indicated, careful planning based on clinical and radiographic examinations is essential to guard against postoperative complications like: bleeding, alveolitis, infections, injury to adjacent teeth, oroantral communications, or even mandibular fractures. Although rare, the risk of postoperative mandibular fractures after third molar impaction surgery is related to some factors. Our case report a 50-year-old white female patient with a complaint of pain in the region of the left mandibular angle and stated that three weeks before she had the left mandibular third molar extracted, which computerized tomographic confirmed the presence of a fracture in the mandibular angle. However, our report contributes to showing the predisposing factors to cause this injury after a review of the literature, showing the clinician what they should take like consideration when they indicate the extraction of third molars. To avoid this complication, factors like bony impaction, depth of tooth within bone, proximity to the inferior dental canal, tooth position in relation to adjacent teeth, the presence of root dilacerations and others must be taken into account. A case of late mandibular fracture that occurred 21 days after third molar extraction is reported. Conservative treatment was adopted and after six-months of radiographic and clinical follow-up, the patient had fully preserved mandibular function, normal occlusion and no discomfort.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidad de La Frontera. Facultad de MedicinaInternational journal of odontostomatology v.7 n.2 20132013-08-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-381X2013000200019en10.4067/S0718-381X2013000200019
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-cl
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Andrade,Valdir Cabral
Neto,Patrício José de Oliveira
de Moraes,Márcio
Asprino,Luciana
spellingShingle Andrade,Valdir Cabral
Neto,Patrício José de Oliveira
de Moraes,Márcio
Asprino,Luciana
Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
author_facet Andrade,Valdir Cabral
Neto,Patrício José de Oliveira
de Moraes,Márcio
Asprino,Luciana
author_sort Andrade,Valdir Cabral
title Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
title_short Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
title_full Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
title_fullStr Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
title_full_unstemmed Late Mandibular Angle Fracture After Impacted Third Molar Extraction: Case Report and Review of Predisposing Factors
title_sort late mandibular angle fracture after impacted third molar extraction: case report and review of predisposing factors
description Third molar surgery is the most common surgical procedure in the oral cavity. Whenever extraction is indicated, careful planning based on clinical and radiographic examinations is essential to guard against postoperative complications like: bleeding, alveolitis, infections, injury to adjacent teeth, oroantral communications, or even mandibular fractures. Although rare, the risk of postoperative mandibular fractures after third molar impaction surgery is related to some factors. Our case report a 50-year-old white female patient with a complaint of pain in the region of the left mandibular angle and stated that three weeks before she had the left mandibular third molar extracted, which computerized tomographic confirmed the presence of a fracture in the mandibular angle. However, our report contributes to showing the predisposing factors to cause this injury after a review of the literature, showing the clinician what they should take like consideration when they indicate the extraction of third molars. To avoid this complication, factors like bony impaction, depth of tooth within bone, proximity to the inferior dental canal, tooth position in relation to adjacent teeth, the presence of root dilacerations and others must be taken into account. A case of late mandibular fracture that occurred 21 days after third molar extraction is reported. Conservative treatment was adopted and after six-months of radiographic and clinical follow-up, the patient had fully preserved mandibular function, normal occlusion and no discomfort.
publisher Universidad de La Frontera. Facultad de Medicina
publishDate 2013
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-381X2013000200019
work_keys_str_mv AT andradevaldircabral latemandibularanglefractureafterimpactedthirdmolarextractioncasereportandreviewofpredisposingfactors
AT netopatriciojosedeoliveira latemandibularanglefractureafterimpactedthirdmolarextractioncasereportandreviewofpredisposingfactors
AT demoraesmarcio latemandibularanglefractureafterimpactedthirdmolarextractioncasereportandreviewofpredisposingfactors
AT asprinoluciana latemandibularanglefractureafterimpactedthirdmolarextractioncasereportandreviewofpredisposingfactors
_version_ 1755996174386462720