Trauma and Fractures
Pulpal & Periapical Lesions
Periodontal Disease
Radiographic Interpretation
Miscellaneous
100

This type of fracture involves a clean break across the root and often results in crown mobility

What is a root fracture?

100

This periapical condition results in a painful, throbbing sensation and is caused by pulpal death

What is acute periapical abscess?

100

How far from the CEJ is the healthy alveolar crest normally found?

What is 1.5-2 mm

100

This radiographic technique is preferred for periodontal evaluation

What is Paralleling Technique?
100

Which type of resorption shortens the length of a tooth's root?

What is External Resporption?

200

This type of trauma results in the tooth appearing longer than adjacent teeth.

What is extrusion?

200

Calcification of the pulp chamber, that decreases the size of the pulp chamber.

What is Pulpal Sclerosis?

200

This bone loss pattern appears uneven and slanted on radiographs.

What is Vertical Bone loss?

200

This structure appears as a thin radiopaque line surrounding the tooth root?

What is the lamina dura?

200

This furcation class can be visually seen on a radiograph.

What is Class III and or Class IV?

300

This condition refers to partial displacement of teeth due to trauma.

What is luxation?

300

Which pulpal lesion appears radiographically as round, ovoid radiopacities within the pulp?

What is Pupal Stones?

300

Which grading level indicatesWhich grading level indicates rapid rate of progression? 

What is Grade C

300

This radiopaque lesion is found in nonvital teeth with long-standing pulpitis

What is Condensing Osteitis?
300

This type of trauma results in the tooth appearing shorter than adjacent teeth.

What is Intrusion?

400

This traumatic injury involves the labial and palatal plates and may show a radiolucent line on a radiograph.

What is a maxillary fracture?

400

A nonvital tooth with radiographic radiolucency but no symptoms likely has this lesion.

What is a periapical granuloma?

400

This periodontal stage involves furcation involvement and vertical bone loss.

What is Stage III

400

This condition appears as a well-defined radiopacity below the apex of a vital tooth

What is sclerotic bone?

400

What should be documented in the patient chart when it comes to Lesions.

What is appearance, location and size?

500

This type of Radiograph is the only way to see a mandibular fracture

What is a panoramic radiograph?

500

Which pulpal lesion results in no visible pulp chamber or canals?

What is pulpal obliteration?

500

Name this Stage of Periodontal disease


What is Stage II

500

What condition is present on #19


What is Hypercementosis?

500

This stage of periodontal disease can be seen as an indistinct fuzziness of the crestal lamina dura. 

What is Stage I?

M
e
n
u