After moving to Canada, I have great difficulties convincing the
Canadian dentists of my problem. Maybe I need an appropriate medical
term. Can somebody help?
I have 2 molars and 2 pre-molars that are genetically abnormal. The
centre of the tooth is protruding, like a tube/cap growing out of the
top surface. A dentist told me that the "cap" would continue to grow
upwards if left alone. What is the medical term for this type of teeth?
My childhood dentist removed the "cap" on the 2 molars and filled the
top. Later, the "cap" on one of the premolars chipped off, and I got a
root-canal treatment for this premolar.
Then I moved to Alberta, Canada. The "cap" on the other premolar came
off also. So all 4 abnormal teeth no longer had the "cap", and the
abnormality is no longer visible on the outside. (Surprisingly, the
x-rays in canada cannot reveal the problem either, and the dentists
keep telling me that my teeth have no genetical problem.) I got serious
nerve inflamation and fainted in front of the dentist, before he
finally drilled deeper into the premolar, and gave me a root-canal
treatment.
Now I am living in Ontario, Canada. The fillings on my molars are
coming off. My guess is I need them re-filled, so I went to a dentist
today. Once again, the dentist said my molars have no problem, no
genetical problem at all. I told him my "story", and he gave me that
same expression of ridicule. (Please, not again!)
What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
please?
Joel M. Eichen - 21 Jan 2005 23:29 GMT
>After moving to Canada, I have great difficulties convincing the
>Canadian dentists of my problem. Maybe I need an appropriate medical
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
>term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
>please?
I'd go with the odontocruditis.
Joel M. Eichen - 21 Jan 2005 23:35 GMT
>coming off. My guess is I need them re-filled, so I went to a dentist
>today. Once again, the dentist said my molars have no problem, no
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
>please?
You may want a referral to Jan Drew's dentist. Hew is very good with
this kind of treatment. Oh it will cost you, but it will be worth it.
Joel
jdrew63929@aol.com - 21 Jan 2005 23:57 GMT
> >coming off. My guess is I need them re-filled, so I went to a dentist
> >today. Once again, the dentist said my molars have no problem, no
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> >term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
> >please?
<snip>
Joel is not known to help, just to blather.
Jan
Joel M. Eichen - 22 Jan 2005 00:34 GMT
>> >coming off. My guess is I need them re-filled, so I went to a
>dentist
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
>Jan
Jan, you dentist does this kind of work, right?
Joel
Roy Brown - 22 Jan 2005 08:53 GMT
The original post went missing from my server. I can't reply, so I reposted in a
new thread.
This sounds like Dens evaginatus not to be confused with Dens invaginatus (Dens
in dente).
Also known as :
Occlusal Tuberculated Premolar
Leong's premolar
Evaginated Odontome
Occlusal Enamel Pearl
Predominate in persons of Mongoloid ancestry but one study reports a series of
cases in Caucasians in England.
The text below describes the condition it is copied from:
www.ada.org.au/media/documents/Products_Publications/
Journal%20Archives/1998%20Archive/October/9810Ngeo.pdf
or
http://tinyurl.com/6r897
Dens evaginatus is a developmental anomaly
which is found most frequently in premolars. It
occurs almost exclusively among people of
Mongoloid racial stock such as the Chinese,
Japanese, Eskimos and to a lesser extent, the Malays,
Filipinos, American Indians1 and the Thai.2 Isolated
cases of dens evaginatus have also been documented
in Caucasians.3,4
In Malaysia and Singapore, this anomaly is
popularly referred to as 'Leong's premolar', after M.
O. Leong who first drew attention to the anomalous
premolar at a meeting of the Malayan Dental
Association in 1946.5 Leong did not realize that the
p r e m o l a rs were not the only teeth affected.
Occasionally the molar,2 canine and incisor teeth
were also affected.6
Dens evaginatus appears as an accessory cusp or
tubercle located between the buccal and lingual
cusps of premolars. It is composed of an enamel
covering over a dentine core with a fine extension of
pulpal tissue.7 Dens evaginatus has practical
significance because of its morphology and extension
of pulpal tissue. If the tubercle fractures, the pulpal
extension into the tubercle may be exposed to the
oral environment. This can result in early pulpal
i n f l a m m ation (pulpitis), necrosis, periapical infection
and even osteomyelitis.8
I think Joel Eichen (Dr. "odontocruditis") as well as your dentist could use a
refresher course in oral pathology. If you are near Toronto, there is a
professor at UofT -Dentistry that is well know for his knowledge in tooth
anomalies.
--
Roy
sunnydolly2003 wrote:
After moving to Canada, I have great difficulties convincing the
Canadian dentists of my problem. Maybe I need an appropriate medical
term. Can somebody help?
I have 2 molars and 2 pre-molars that are genetically abnormal. The
centre of the tooth is protruding, like a tube/cap growing out of the
top surface. A dentist told me that the "cap" would continue to grow
upwards if left alone. What is the medical term for this type of teeth?
My childhood dentist removed the "cap" on the 2 molars and filled the
top. Later, the "cap" on one of the premolars chipped off, and I got a
root-canal treatment for this premolar.
Then I moved to Alberta, Canada. The "cap" on the other premolar came
off also. So all 4 abnormal teeth no longer had the "cap", and the
abnormality is no longer visible on the outside. (Surprisingly, the
x-rays in canada cannot reveal the problem either, and the dentists
keep telling me that my teeth have no genetical problem.) I got serious
nerve inflamation and fainted in front of the dentist, before he
finally drilled deeper into the premolar, and gave me a root-canal
treatment.
Now I am living in Ontario, Canada. The fillings on my molars are
coming off. My guess is I need them re-filled, so I went to a dentist
today. Once again, the dentist said my molars have no problem, no
genetical problem at all. I told him my "story", and he gave me that
same expression of ridicule. (Please, not again!)
What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
please?
What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
term for my abnormal teeth will help? Can somebody shed some light
please?

Signature
Roy
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Matt - 22 Jan 2005 15:45 GMT
> What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
> term for my abnormal teeth will help?
Arrange for your previous dentist to send a description of your
condition to your new dentists.
sunnydolly2003@yahoo.com - 23 Jan 2005 08:07 GMT
Yeah, maybe I should try that too. I hope that dentist is still in
practice. It's been over 15 years, and a lot of people have left
town...
> > What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
> > term for my abnormal teeth will help?
>
> Arrange for your previous dentist to send a description of your
> condition to your new dentists.
sunnydolly2003@yahoo.com - 23 Jan 2005 08:08 GMT
Yeah, maybe I should try that too. I hope that dentist is still in
practice. It's been over 15 years, and a lot of people have left
town...
> > What do I have to do to convince him? Perhaps an appropriate medical
> > term for my abnormal teeth will help?
>
> Arrange for your previous dentist to send a description of your
> condition to your new dentists.