Dentistry Module
DentistryK04.5

Chronic Apical Periodontitis

Silent periradicular destruction — granuloma and cyst formation at the root apex

Prevalence: Found in 20–50% of root-filled teeth on radiographic surveys; extremely common incidental finding

Overview

Chronic apical periodontitis (CAP) is the most prevalent periapical pathology — a low-grade, persistent inflammatory reaction of periradicular tissues to bacterial products from a necrotic infected root canal. Unlike its acute counterpart, CAP is typically asymptomatic, discovered incidentally on radiographs as the characteristic periapical radiolucency.

The periapical lesion in CAP is predominantly a granuloma (75–85% of lesions) — a mass of chronically inflamed granulation tissue containing macrophages, lymphocytes, plasma cells, and fibroblasts — or a radicular cyst (15–25%) — an epithelium-lined pathological cavity containing fluid or semi-solid material.

The biological debate over whether periapical cysts can heal with non-surgical root canal treatment or require surgical enucleation has evolved with CBCT evidence showing that most lesions, regardless of histological type, resolve after adequate endodontic therapy.

Etiology

Chronic apical periodontitis develops when the host-pathogen balance in an infected root canal establishes a stable, low-grade equilibrium. Bacteria in the apical portion of the root canal system continuously release antigens that provoke periapical inflammation, but the immune response contains rather than eliminates the infection.

Intraradicular biofilm dominates the microbiology — polymicrobial communities with Fusobacterium, Prevotella, Actinomyces, Streptococcus, and others form robust biofilms on canal walls, in ramifications, isthmuses, and accessory canals that resist irrigation and instrumentation.

Extraradicular infection (biofilm on root surfaces, periapical actinomycosis) accounts for a minority of persistent lesions but is critical to recognize as it does not respond to non-surgical treatment. Periapical actinomycosis — Actinomyces species forming sulfur granules visible histologically — is the classic example.

Professional Content

Full clinical detail — pathogenesis, ICD-10 classification, diagnostic criteria, treatment protocols, and interactive quiz — is available with a Professional subscription.

PathogenesisICD-10 ClassificationClinical ManifestationsDiagnostic CriteriaTreatment ProtocolPrognosisPreventionInteractive Quiz

Abone olmaya hazır değil misiniz? E-postanızı bırakın, erken erişim hakkında sizi bilgilendireceğiz.

Pathogenesis

Radicular granuloma formation is a classic Type IV (delayed-type) hypersensitivity response. Persistent antigen stimulation drives macrophage accumulation and epithelioid transformation. Lymphocytes, plasma cells, and fibroblasts proliferate; new blood vessels form (angiogenesis); and the lesion becomes encapsulated in fibrous tissue.

Classification

1

Periapical Granuloma

Granulation tissue mass without epithelial lining; most common (75–85%)

2

Radicular Cyst

Epithelium-lined cystic cavity; formed by Malassez epithelial rests proliferation

Clinical Manifestations

Chronic apical periodontitis is primarily a radiographic diagnosis. The vast majority of patients are completely asymptomatic — no pain, no swelling, no sensitivity to biting. The lesion is discovered incidentally during routine dental radiographs or investigation of adjacent teeth.

Diagnosis

Periapical radiographs reveal the characteristic periapical radiolucency — ranging from subtle widening of the PDL space to a well-defined, corticated radiolucent lesion (suggesting cyst) or a diffuse, poorly-defined radiolucency (suggesting granuloma). The radiographic appearance does NOT reliably distinguish granuloma from cyst histologically.

Treatment Protocol

Stage 1

Non-Surgical Root Canal Treatment

First-line treatment; achieves healing in 85–95% of granulomas and many cysts

Prognosis

Non-surgical root canal treatment achieves periapical healing in 85–95% of teeth without previous root canal treatment. For retreatment of previously filled teeth with persistent lesions, success rates range from 65–80%. Large lesions (>10mm) and true radicular cysts have lower healing rates with non-surgical treatment alone.

Prevention

  • Adequate coronal seal after root canal treatment to prevent re-infection
  • Timely crown placement after root canal treatment (within 3 months)

Interactive Quiz

Test your understanding of Chronic Apical Periodontitis.

Q1. What percentage of periapical lesions are histologically granulomas vs. cysts?

A.50% each
B.Granuloma 75–85%, cyst 15–25%

3D Pathology Description

Three-panel visualization: Panel 1 — periapical granuloma cross-section showing the layered architecture: necrotic canal center (dark grey) → bacterial biofilm on root surface (violet layer) → fibrous capsule (dense grey band) → central granuloma tissue (pink/red with cellular dots representing macrophages, lymphocytes, plasma cells) → peripheral bone with active osteoclasts (orange). Panel 2 — radicular cyst formation: same root but with epithelial lining (thin pink layer) → cyst lumen filled with clear fluid containing cholesterol crystal formations (angular yellow reflective shapes) → inflammatory cells in cyst wall. Panel 3 — healing after root canal treatment: progressive bone fill animation over 18 months, show cancellous trabeculae regenerating from periphery inward as time slider advances. In all panels, animate Malassez cell rests in PDL as small green clusters that proliferate into cyst lining when stimulated. Include CBCT-style cross-sectional view option showing lesion in axial, coronal, and sagittal planes simultaneously.