 |
Cracked
Tooth syndrome-Tooth Fracture |
Cracked tooth syndrome usually
occurs in a molar or premolar tooth but may affect
any tooth. The syndrome may involve a tooth with large
fillings or restorations where the crack runs under
a weakened cusp (the raised edge of a tooth).
Simple cracks that are left untreated are likely
to become complex cracks.
Why do teeth crack?
Many people find life more stressful nowadays
and develop the habit of clenching or grinding their
teeth, particularly at night. This can cause cracks
to develop even in teeth with few or no fillings.
Cracks may start at the top of the tooth and run
downwards, involving the pulp, nerve and root. Early
diagnosis and treatment is important, because with
early treatment your dentist may be able to prevent
the crack from growing through the tooth.
 One of the most difficult diagnoses in
dentistry is Cracked tooth syndrome. The patient generally presents
to us with sharp pain on chewing in a certain area of his mouth, but he
frequently cannot tell us which particular tooth hurts. It is
generally a back tooth, and it becomes plain which tooth it is when the
dentist has the patient bite on piece of wood placed on top of the correct
tooth.
As a rule, the dentist cannot see any problem
with the tooth, either clinically (in the mouth), or radiographicly (on an
x-ray). The tooth may have no fillings or decay, or it may have an intact
filling with no visible associated problems. Nothing looks wrong, but the
patient feels sharp pain when he applies biting pressure to the top of the
tooth. Symptoms of sharp pain to pressure accompanied by no visible
signs of problem with the tooth are the hallmarks of cracked tooth
syndrome.
The diagnosis can be further confirmed when the
dentist uses an instrument that rests on one part of the tooth at a
time. There is frequently sharp pain when the pressure is applied to
only one particular cusp (the pointed parts of a back tooth), and not to
others. If the tooth has a crack in it, the pain is caused by
movement of the affected cusp. The other cusps generally prove to be
non painful when the same pressure is applied. The "movement" of the
fragment is usually microscopic, and not visible to the naked
eye.
 Prior to extraction, the crack in this tooth was
difficult to see, as in the left hand image. The right hand
image shows how the tooth really looks once the pieces are splayed
apart. This crack happened to go directly through the dental
pulp (nerve) which was still alive prior to extraction. This tooth
was extremely sensitive when pressure was applied to the lose
fragment. Note: The darkness in the crown of this tooth is due
to staining from an amalgam filling which is not visible in these
images.
 
Q: When is a crack in a tooth not a crack?
A: When it's a craze!
Crazes are visible cracks in the enamel of the
teeth. They are always painless and generally they are
vertical (but not always). They are most noticeable in
the front teeth, and frequently cause patients a lot of
concern. They tend to form as we get older, and are considered
by dentists to be a part of the normal anatomy of the teeth.
Crazes happen because of the differences between the coefficients of
thermal expansion of the enamel and the underlying dentin.
When a person
switches quickly between eating and drinking hot and
cold foods, these two components expand and contract at slightly
different rates causing cracks in the more brittle outer layer of
enamel. The underlying dentin is less brittle and does not
crack. Since the enamel and the dentin are bonded to each
other molecule for molecule, there is no danger of the enamel or the
tooth breaking. The image below shows numerous vertical crazes
in several of the lower incisors and the right lower canine (the one
on the left of the image).
How can a tooth have a crack, but show no
outward signs of a crack?
When a real crack occurs in a vital tooth (one
with a living nerve), the crack frequently does not propagate all the way
through the tooth. This type of crack is called a greenstick
fracture because, like a green branch from a tree, the fracture may be
mechanically present, but the unbroken segments of the branch hold it
together.
The crack usually propagates through sensitive
parts of the tooth (the dentin), many times involving the living nerve.
When pressure is applied to the cracked piece of the tooth, a tiny bit of
movement of that piece places pressure on the
nerve,
or other sensitive tooth structure and even though the movement is tiny,
it hurts a lot! Since the tooth cannot heal itself, the pain is
always present whenever pressure is applied to the biting surface of that
tooth.
The pain will not go away until one of two
things happen.
-
The cracked piece of tooth may break off
relieving the pain when pressure is applied to it. When this happens,
the tooth can usually be repaired with a crown or a simple filling and
the patient (and tooth) lives happily ever after.
-
The nerve may die as a result of the repeated
assaults placed on it by the moving fragment of tooth. When this
happens, the pain to pressure may stop, but the dead nerve leaves the
patient vulnerable to a dental abscess unless a
Root
Canal, and subsequent crown
are done.
Can cracked teeth be saved?
That depends on the nature of the crack. The only portion of a
cracked tooth that can be repaired is that part above the gumline!
Some categories of cracked tooth can be saved and some cannot.
The real difficulty for the dentist is trying to determine the category of
crack the tooth has. Since these teeth usually remain intact, and since
the crack is not visible, it can be nearly impossible for the
dentist to make this decision for the patient. Whenever we are
dealing with a cracked tooth, the patient must understand that whatever
treatment the dentist prescribes, and no matter how hard he tries, the
tooth may still be lost eventually! Repair of any tooth thought
to be cracked is always risky, and no guarantees can be made about the
outcome.
The safest way to repair a cracked tooth involves three steps:
- Perform a root canal on
the tooth. This procedure is absolutely necessary if the crack has
propagated through the nerve space because in this case, the nerve will
eventually die causing an abscess. While this procedure is not
necessary if the crack does not involve the nerve, there is really NO
WAY FOR THE DENTIST TO DETERMINE IF THIS IS THE CASE.
- Place at least two posts in the
roots of the tooth. Often, once a root canal is begun, the dentist
can look into the pulp chamber and actually see the crack in the floor
of the chamber. If this is the case, then the crack can be
stabilized by placing posts in the roots on either side of the
crack. This procedure is NOT indicated if it can be determined
that the crack runs through the orifice of one of the canals. The
only way to do this is by visual inspection. Unfortunately, the
crack is not always visible to the dentist, even once the root canal
procedure has been started and the chamber is empty.
- Crown the
tooth. This procedure is always indicated for back teeth with root
canals, even if there is no crack in the tooth.
The categories of cracked teeth
Oblique supragingival fractures
As you can see from the diagrams on the right, this category of
crack remains above the gumline in its entirety. This is the
type that is most likely to simply break off one day while the
patient is eating.
This type of fracture generally does not involve the nerve, so
after the lose fragment breaks off, the patient suffers no more pain
to pressure. The exposed live dentin may be sensitive, but a
trip to the dentist can result in a simple repair with an amalgam or
composite filling.
If the fractured-off piece is very large, it is usually advisable
to place a crown on the
tooth in order to prevent fractures
in other areas of the same tooth.
Note that while most of the other categories of fractured tooth
require root canals for their continued survival, this one
does not. Unfortunately, unless the fractured fragment has
actually broken off, it is difficult, if not impossible to tell
which category of fracture the dentist is dealing with
Oblique subgingival fractures
This category of crack goes well below the gumline, and
generally below the level where the jawbone starts. If the
fragment breaks off, it is likely to remain attached to the gums,
and can be quite painful until the dentist removes it. Once
the fragment is removed, the tooth is similar to the supragingival
fracture above, except that the level of the necessary repair can be
so far below the gumline, that
periodontal surgery may be necessary to expose the
margin so that a crown can be placed.
The nerve of the tooth is most often not damaged by this type of
fracture, but because of the extent of the tooth lost, it is often
wise to perform a root canal and
post and core before placing a crown on the
tooth.
Unfortunately, this type of crack can remain unbroken and
sensitive to pressure for years, so that it may be impossible to
differentiate this category of crack from the more serious ones
discussed below.
The probability of survival of this type of tooth depends upon
how far below the gumline the crack propagated. The deeper
below the gumline the crack propagates, the less likely that repair
will preserve the tooth for long.
Sometimes, a crown will bind the pieces together and eliminate
the pain upon pressure. Generally, a
root canal is advisable as well since if the
fracture extends very far down the root, it has probably come very
close to the nerve, or may even have effected it directly.
There is no way to tell unless the fragment breaks off first.
The vertical furcation fracture
The furcation is the place where the tooth splits into two or
more separate roots. A crack like this always involves the
nerve of the tooth. In addition, since both pieces of the
tooth are held in position by the bone, this type of crack seldom
separates all the way.
This category of fracture MAY be fixable with a
root canal, a
post and core (with posts in both roots) and a
crown. Unfortunately, although the fragments
may be very effectively splinted by the posts and the crown, the
crack still exists between the roots.
Even though the crack
may not even be visible to the naked eye, nature may still reject
the tooth. (Nature works on all scales, including the
microscopic, and even a tiny crack may be noticed by the body's
defenses and evoke an abscess in response.)
We generally expect about 50 to 60 percent of these to last 5
years or longer if they are properly repaired with a root canal,
post and core and crown. Many last indefinitely. Some
will fail inside of a year.
Oblique Root Fractures
Root fractures do not involve the crown of the tooth at
all. The broken fragment is generally entirely below the
gumline, most often entirely under the bone.
Root fractures, especially if they are close to the crown of the
tooth like #1 to the right, are generally fatal (for the
tooth). It may be possible to save the tooth for a while with
a root canal, and a
post that extends down the fractured root, past
the fracture line, but the tooth will eventually be lost to an
abscess of the bone surrounding the crack. We see about
a 10 to 20 percent success rate in situations like
this.
Root fractures close to the tip of the root, as in #2 have a
better chance of survival. We generally perform a
root canal procedure down to the point of
fracture, and ignore the broken fragment at the tip. This
frequently is resorbed by the body, and the tooth loses all its pain
to pressure, and lives happily ever after. We expect about a
60 to 90 percent survival rate of five or more years for teeth like
these if properly treated (depending upon how close to the tip of
the root the crack lies).
Vertical Apical root fractures
Vertical fractures at the apex (tip of the root) are some of the
most difficult to deal with. This type of crack causes mild to
moderate pain to pressure even when the nerve has been removed via a
root canal. They cannot be stabilized with either a crown, or
a post in the root. The pain to pressure comes from the fact
that the moving fragments exert pressure on the surrounding bone.
These teeth are often simply tolerated by the patient because the
pain to pressure, though persistent, is much less severe after a
root canal is performed. Unfortunately, only about 50 percent
of these survive for five or more years after treatment with a
root canal and a
crown because some people have immune systems that
will not tolerate a fracture in this part of a tooth. It is
usually worth a try, but don't be surprised if the tooth must be
extracted in a few years.
The following series of images shows the progression of bony
destruction due to the sudden occurrence of a crack in a tooth that
happens below the level of the bone:
The x-ray image on the left shows a tooth with a crown and a
post. Note that the level of the bone is at about 2 mm below the
margin of the crown on both sides of the tooth in this image. The
center image shows that something is happening to the bone that surrounds
the tooth. The image on the right is the same as the one in the
center, except that the bone level has been highlighted. X-rays are
two dimensional projections of a three dimensional image. The red
highlight shows the plate of bone on one side of the tooth while the
yellow highlight shows the plate of bone on the other side. If you
use your imagination, you can see that the tooth is now really sitting in
a "bowl" of bone. This represents bone eroded by the presence of the crack
in the tooth. The crack formed because of excess pressure on the
tooth. This caused the root of the tooth to crack from the level of
the crown margin to the base of the post. The images below show the
actual root once it was extracted.
 
|
|
 |
Treatment for a cracked tooth
Early treatment is important, and may involve a
large filling or a crown. The goal is to stop or slow
down the growth of the crack. The treatment depends
on the position of the crack and how far it has grown.
The treatment for most cracked teeth involves removing
the weakened cusp (the raised edge of the tooth) and
placing a large filing or crown (see Geddes Crown
and Bridges information brochure).
 |
 |
| Cracked
tooth |
Remove
cracked cusp |
| |
|
 |
 |
| A filling
or a crown |
Completed
treatment |
|