Unified Content Catalog
All content types in one searchable multilingual registry: disease theory, courses, virtual patients, procedures, and media.

Radicular Cyst — Clinical Manifestations
The most common odontogenic cyst, arising at the apex of a non-vital tooth

Acute Apical Periodontitis — Diagnosis
Acute inflammation of the periradicular tissues — from hyperemia to suppuration at the root apex

Acute Pulpitis — Diagnosis
Reversible and irreversible inflammatory conditions of the dental pulp

Aphthous Stomatitis — Diagnosis
Recurrent painful oral ulcers of unknown etiology — the most common oral mucosal disease

Chronic Apical Periodontitis — Diagnosis
Silent periradicular destruction — granuloma and cyst formation at the root apex

Chronic Periodontitis — Diagnosis
Progressive irreversible destruction of the tooth-supporting apparatus

Chronic Pulpitis — Diagnosis
Prolonged, low-grade pulp inflammation progressing silently toward irreversibility

Dental Abscess — Diagnosis
Acute purulent infection with soft tissue spread — from localized pus to life-threatening fascial space infection

Dental Caries — Diagnosis
The most prevalent infectious disease worldwide

Dental Erosion — Diagnosis
Irreversible loss of dental hard tissue by chemical dissolution from non-bacterial acids

Dental Fluorosis — Diagnosis
Enamel hypomineralization from excessive fluoride ingestion during tooth development

Dentinal Hypersensitivity — Diagnosis
Sharp, transient pain from exposed dentin in response to thermal, evaporative, tactile, or osmotic stimuli

Gingivitis — Diagnosis
Reversible gingival inflammation — the most prevalent oral disease and precursor to periodontitis

Pericoronitis — Diagnosis
Inflammation around the crown of a partially erupted tooth

Periodontal Abscess — Diagnosis
Acute purulent infection localised within the periodontal tissues

Radicular Cyst — Diagnosis
The most common odontogenic cyst, arising at the apex of a non-vital tooth

Acute Apical Periodontitis — Etiology
Acute inflammation of the periradicular tissues — from hyperemia to suppuration at the root apex

Acute Pulpitis — Etiology
Reversible and irreversible inflammatory conditions of the dental pulp

Aphthous Stomatitis — Etiology
Recurrent painful oral ulcers of unknown etiology — the most common oral mucosal disease

Chronic Apical Periodontitis — Etiology
Silent periradicular destruction — granuloma and cyst formation at the root apex

Chronic Periodontitis — Etiology
Progressive irreversible destruction of the tooth-supporting apparatus

Chronic Pulpitis — Etiology
Prolonged, low-grade pulp inflammation progressing silently toward irreversibility