Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region

Foreign bodies may be deposited in the oral cavity either by traumatic injury or iatrogenically. Among the commonly encountered iatrogenic foreign bodies are restorative materials like amalgam, obturation materials, broken instruments, needles, and so forth. The discovery of foreign bodies in the te...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sidhi Passi, Neeraj Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2012-01-01
Series:Case Reports in Dentistry
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/191873
id doaj-835239d285194b4f86ad85e4d7a3af16
record_format Article
spelling doaj-835239d285194b4f86ad85e4d7a3af162021-07-02T06:14:13ZengHindawi LimitedCase Reports in Dentistry2090-64472090-64552012-01-01201210.1155/2012/191873191873Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial RegionSidhi Passi0Neeraj Sharma1Department of Pedodontics, Dr. HSJ Institute of Dental Sciences and Research Center, PU Dental College, Sector 25, Chandigarh, IndiaDepartment of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Dr. HSJ Institue of Dental Sciences and Research, Chandigarh, IndiaForeign bodies may be deposited in the oral cavity either by traumatic injury or iatrogenically. Among the commonly encountered iatrogenic foreign bodies are restorative materials like amalgam, obturation materials, broken instruments, needles, and so forth. The discovery of foreign bodies in the teeth is a special situation, which is often diagnosed accidentally. Detailed case history, clinical and radiographic examinations are necessary to come to a conclusion about the nature, size, location of the foreign body, and the difficulty involved in its retrieval. It is more common to find this situation in children as it is a well-known fact that children often tend to have the habit of placing foreign objects in the mouth. Sometimes the foreign objects get stuck in the root canals of the teeth, which the children do not reveal to their parents due to fear. These foreign objects may act as a potential source of infection and may later lead to a painful condition. This paper discusses the presence of unusual foreign bodies—a tip of the metallic compass, stapler pin, copper strip, and a broken sewing needle impregnated in the gingiva and their management.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/191873
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sidhi Passi
Neeraj Sharma
spellingShingle Sidhi Passi
Neeraj Sharma
Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
Case Reports in Dentistry
author_facet Sidhi Passi
Neeraj Sharma
author_sort Sidhi Passi
title Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
title_short Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
title_full Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
title_fullStr Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
title_full_unstemmed Unusual Foreign Bodies in the Orofacial Region
title_sort unusual foreign bodies in the orofacial region
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Case Reports in Dentistry
issn 2090-6447
2090-6455
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Foreign bodies may be deposited in the oral cavity either by traumatic injury or iatrogenically. Among the commonly encountered iatrogenic foreign bodies are restorative materials like amalgam, obturation materials, broken instruments, needles, and so forth. The discovery of foreign bodies in the teeth is a special situation, which is often diagnosed accidentally. Detailed case history, clinical and radiographic examinations are necessary to come to a conclusion about the nature, size, location of the foreign body, and the difficulty involved in its retrieval. It is more common to find this situation in children as it is a well-known fact that children often tend to have the habit of placing foreign objects in the mouth. Sometimes the foreign objects get stuck in the root canals of the teeth, which the children do not reveal to their parents due to fear. These foreign objects may act as a potential source of infection and may later lead to a painful condition. This paper discusses the presence of unusual foreign bodies—a tip of the metallic compass, stapler pin, copper strip, and a broken sewing needle impregnated in the gingiva and their management.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/191873
work_keys_str_mv AT sidhipassi unusualforeignbodiesintheorofacialregion
AT neerajsharma unusualforeignbodiesintheorofacialregion
_version_ 1721337481248374784