Endodontic procedure for root canal treatment Dreyonna Carroll Anthem Institute Rotary tube therapy or endodontic endodontic procedures are performed by specialized general dentists and endodontists. The patient is diagnosed as having persistent, severe pain, discoloration, or susceptibility to food, even when touching a part of the tooth or even around the teeth, and receiving spin therapy by the expert. This means that it is ready, as it means that if the tooth can be preserved it will not cause serious damage or caries.
Root canal treatment is usually an easy way to relieve toothache and save teeth. If there is inflammation or infection at the base of the tooth, the patient usually needs a root canal. During root canal treatment, an endodontist specializing in this treatment carefully removes the pulp from the pulp, cleanses the root canal, disinfects and shapes, and places the filler to seal the space.
Does your dentist or endodontist refer to you as you need root canal treatment? If so, you are not alone. Please treat and save millions of teeth each year using root canal treatment or endodontic treatment. This page explains in detail the root canal treatment and how it relieves your teeth pain and maintains your smile. To understand the treatment of pulp, it is helpful to understand the anatomical structure of teeth. Below a hard layer called teeth inside, white enamel and dentin, there is a soft tissue called pulp. The pulp contains blood vessels, nerves and connective tissue and, during development, produces hard tissue around the teeth.
The extension of the root in the root is called the root canal. The root canal is connected to the surrounding tissue via a top opening. This is a cementum opening, nerve supply of teeth, and blood supply from the surrounding tissue to the pulp.
The root canal anatomy consists of pulp cavity and root canal. Both contain pulp. A small branch called an auxiliary tube is most common near the root (the top), but it is possible to encounter it anywhere in the root length. The total number of root canals varies depending on the number of roots, but may be 1 to 4, 5, or even more. There may be multiple root canals per tube. Some teeth have variable internal anatomical structure than other teeth. The main causes of failure of root canal treatment are abnormal root canal shape, complex branches (in particular horizontal branches), and multiple tubes. (For example, if the dentist is unaware of the secondary root canal and has not been cleaned or sealed it will continue infecting and will cause root canal treatment to fail)