Treatment
Acute Apical Periodontitis (No Abscess, No Swelling)
Pulpectomy and drainage through root canal; occlusal relief
- • Local anesthesia (IAN block or buccal infiltration)
- • Access opening and pulpectomy with complete necrotic tissue removal
- • Canal instrumentation to working length to establish periapical drainage
- • Copious NaOCl irrigation
- • Occlusal reduction (reduce tooth from occlusion to relieve proprioceptive hypersensitivity)
- • Calcium hydroxide intracanal medicament; temporary restoration
- • NSAIDs (ibuprofen 600mg q6h); antibiotics only if systemic signs present
Acute Apical Abscess — Localized
Root canal access + incision and drainage (I&D) of abscess
- • Administer LA where possible (may be ineffective in severely acidic abscess tissue)
- • Root canal access, pulpectomy, and drainage through canal
- • If fluctuant swelling: incision through mucosa with #15 blade; blunt dissection with hemostat to release pus
- • Drain placement (penrose drain or gauze wick) to maintain drainage for 24–48 hours
- • Copious saline irrigation of abscess cavity
- • Antibiotics: amoxicillin 500mg TID x 5–7 days (first line); metronidazole 400mg TID if anaerobic emphasis; clindamycin if penicillin allergy
- • Analgesics: ibuprofen ± acetaminophen; opioids reserved for severe cases
- • Follow-up in 24–48 hours for drain removal and reassessment
Spreading Infection / Systemic Signs
Hospital admission, IV antibiotics, surgical drainage
- • Emergency hospital referral if trismus, dysphagia, dysphonia, or airway compromise
- • IV amoxicillin-clavulanate or piperacillin-tazobactam
- • CT scan of neck with contrast to map fascial space involvement
- • Surgical drainage in operating room under general anesthesia
- • ICU monitoring if airway compromised
- • Definitive dental treatment after systemic control
Definitive Endodontic Treatment
Complete root canal treatment after acute phase resolution
- • Complete biomechanical preparation of all canals
- • NaOCl + EDTA irrigation sequence
- • Multiple appointment calcium hydroxide dressing if persistent infection
- • Obturation when tooth asymptomatic and canal dry
- • Core build-up and crown restoration