Chapter 05 Diagnosis · Pulp Therapy · Open Apex · Posts

Endodontics

Two diagnoses are required for every endo question: pulpal and periapical. The thermal test that triggers a lingering response is the most diagnostic finding the exam asks about.

10%
Diagnosis-heavy
01

Pulpal & Periapical Diagnosis

Two questions, two diagnoses. The cold test answers the first. Percussion and palpation answer the second.

Figure 1.1

Pulp test → diagnosis

Cold test response? apply Endo-Ice No response Pulp Necrosis non-vital · likely PARL Brief Normal Pulp resolves < 2 sec Brief, ↑↑ pain Reversible Pulpitis resolves on stim removal Lingering 30+ sec Irreversible Pulpitis may be spontaneous Percussion + palp? + radiograph Normal apex (no PARL) Apical periodontitis / abscess

Pulpal diagnosis — quick reference

DiagnosisCold testSymptomTreatment
Normal pulpBrief response, resolves < 2 secNoneNone
Reversible pulpitisSharp brief response, resolves quicklyPain only on stimulus, briefRemove etiology (caries → restoration)
Symptomatic Irreversible Pulpitis (SIP)Lingering > 30 sec, severeSpontaneous · sharp · radiating · sleep-disturbingRCT or extraction
Asymptomatic Irreversible PulpitisMay or may not respondNone — found via deep caries / pulp exposureRCT or extraction
Pulp NecrosisNo response · no EPTNone or dull discomfortRCT or extraction
Previously TreatedNo response (RCT done)None unless complicationNone
Previously InitiatedNo responseVariableComplete RCT or extract

Periapical diagnosis

DiagnosisPercussionRadiographTreatment
Normal apexNegativeNormal PDLNone
Symptomatic Apical PeriodontitisPositive± Widened PDLRCT
Asymptomatic Apical PeriodontitisNegativePARL presentRCT
Acute Apical AbscessPositive · swelling± Widened PDL or early PARLI&D · RCT · ± antibiotic if systemic
Chronic Apical AbscessNegativePARL with sinus tract / fistulaRCT
Condensing OsteitisNegativeDiffuse radiopacity at apexRCT if pulp involved · monitor if not
M
Memory Hook · Lingering = Irreversible Brief + resolves = Reversible. Lingering > 30 sec = Irreversible. Spontaneous pain = SIP. No response = necrosis. Two questions per case.
02

The 4 P's of Pulp Therapy

Treatment escalates with pulp involvement. Pick the least-invasive option that addresses the depth of injury.

Indirect Pulp Cap

Caries near pulp · NO exposure

Material: RMGI or CaOH on remaining dentin → restoration.

Vitality: reversible pulpitis or normal pulp.

Direct Pulp Cap

Small (< 1 mm) pinpoint exposure

Material: MTA or Biodentine directly on exposure → glass ionomer base → restoration.

Vitality: normal or reversible pulpitis only.

Pulpotomy

Larger exposure, coronal pulp inflamed

Partial: remove 2-3 mm coronal pulp → MTA. Mature or immature.

Cervical: remove all coronal pulp → MTA. Primary teeth OR vital cervical pulp on immature permanent.

P⁴

Pulpectomy / RCT

All pulp inflamed or necrotic

Full removal of coronal + radicular pulp · clean & shape · obturate.

Required for: SIP · necrosis · all non-vital permanent teeth.

M
Memory Hook · "4 P's" Partial cap → Pulp cap (direct) → Pulpotomy → Pulpectomy. Climb only as far as you must.
03

Open Apex — Three Routes

Three options for an immature tooth, chosen by pulp vitality and treatment goal.

Apexogenesis

Pulp: vital · partially exposed.

Goal: continue normal root development (apex closes naturally).

Procedure: partial pulpotomy with MTA + restoration. Monitor.

Outcome: long, thick walls + closed apex.

Apexification

Pulp: non-vital, necrotic.

Goal: form an apical calcified barrier so RCT can be obturated.

Procedure: place MTA apical plug (4-5 mm) → backfill GP. (Older: long-term CaOH dressings.)

Outcome: closed apex but root walls remain thin → fracture risk.

Regenerative Endo

Pulp: non-vital with apical lesion (open apex).

Goal: restore vital tissue → continued root development.

Procedure: disinfect with TAP/CaOH → induce apical bleeding → MTA over blood clot → restoration.

Outcome: thicker walls + apical closure (often best long-term).

04

Analyzing Failed Endo

When an OSCE shows a radiograph of a treated tooth that's failing, run through this acronym.

F
Filling
Voids · short fill · over-extended · poor density. Look for gaps in the GP.
I
Instrumentation
Separated file · ledge · perforation · transportation. Look for radiopaque debris off-axis.
L
Length
Working length too short or beyond apex. Radiographic apex vs. anatomic apex.
E
Extra canals
Missed canal (MB2 in maxillary molars, mid-mesial in mandibular molars).
D
Damage / Defect
Crown leakage · vertical root fracture · perforation. Often shows as J-shaped lesion.
i
OSCE pattern · Re-treatment vs. apicoectomy Re-treatment first if the cause is correctable orthograde (filling, length, missed canal). Apicoectomy if a post is bonded in or obstruction prevents access.
05

Posts & Cores

Three numerical rules for post placement. The OSCE asks for the exact length and apical seal.

Figure 5.1

Post placement — three rules

≥ 4-5 mm GP CEJ Post = ⅔ root length root Post ≤ ⅓ root diameter THREE RULES — POST PLACEMENT ① Length Post = ⅔ root length OR equal to crown height whichever is shorter ② Diameter Post ≤ ⅓ root diameter at narrowest section preserves root strength ③ Apical Seal Leave ≥ 4-5 mm GP at apex do not undermine apical seal

Material choices

MaterialIndication
Fiber post (composite)Most cases. Modulus close to dentin → fewer root fractures.
Cast post-and-coreSeverely damaged tooth · narrow ovoid canal · heavy occlusal load. Higher root fracture risk.
Pre-fabricated metal postLess commonly used; reserved for specific cases.
No postAnterior teeth with adequate ferrule + ≥ 50% coronal tooth structure remaining.
Key · The ferrule rule 2 mm of vertical tooth structure circumferentially above the prep margin. Without ferrule, the post-core-crown system has dramatically higher failure rates regardless of post type.
!
Trap · Posts do NOT reinforce Posts retain a core. They do not strengthen the tooth — and longer/thicker posts increase fracture risk. Pick the smallest post that retains the core.