Management of a High Caries-Risk Patient
CASE REPORT No. 01 : Managing a Teenager With High Caries Risk & A Severely Broken-Down Molar
Introduction
Adolescents often present with unique dental challenges—dietary freedom, irregular dental attendance, and lifestyle changes can lead to sudden spikes in caries.
This case highlights the management of a 16-year-old student who reported with multiple carious lesions, including one severely destroyed mandibular molar associated with a draining sinus.
This blog outlines diagnosis, investigations, treatment sequencing, preventive strategies, and long-term considerations for stabilizing such a patient.
Want to learn more about case-based dentistry, clinical reasoning, and dental exam preparation? Visit MedCrack Academy for detailed courses and guidance.
Table of Contents
Patient Background
- Age: 16 years
- Occupation: College student
- General Health: Fit and healthy
- Chief Concern: “A filling came out on my lower right side and the tooth feels sharp.”
History of Present Complaint
The patient reported that a filling placed over a year ago had dislodged. He previously sought urgent care for toothache triggered by hot and cold foods but never returned for full treatment. After moving residence, he discontinued dental follow-up.
He reports no current pain, except irritation from the sharp tooth edge.
Extraoral Examination
- No swelling
- No palpable lymph nodes
- TMJ function normal
- General appearance healthy (Insert Image Placeholder Here)
➡ [Space for Photo]
Intraoral Examination
Findings:
- Oral hygiene: fair
- Gingivitis present in isolated areas
- Lower right first molar (46) severely carious with a draining buccal sinus
- Adjacent second molar (47) showing a small occlusal cavity
- All other teeth appear intact
- Third molars not visible clinically
(Insert Image of 46 clinical presentation)
➡ [Space for Figure: Clinical Photo]
Vitality Testing
- 46: No response to cold/EPT
- All other teeth: Normal vital responses
- Interpretation: 46 is non-vital and likely the source of infection
Radiographic Assessment
Recommended Views:
- Bitewings
- Detect hidden proximal/occlusal caries
- Evaluate extent of lesions in all molars
- Periapical (Paralleling Technique)
- Assess the pulp involvement
- Confirm apical pathology
- Plan endodontic access or extraction
- OPG (Optional)
- General overview
- Check for third molars
(Insert Bitewing & Periapical Radiographs Here)
➡ [Space for Radiographs]
Radiographic Interpretation
- Extensive caries in 46 invading the pulp chamber
- Complete loss of mesial wall; tooth has tilted mesially
- Periapical radiolucencies on both roots (larger on mesial)
- Loss of lamina dura around furcation
- Bitewings confirm occlusal caries in multiple molars
Diagnoses
Primary Diagnosis
✔ Non-vital mandibular right first molar (46) with a chronic periapical abscess
Secondary Diagnoses
✔ Generalized high caries risk
✔ Early occlusal lesions in multiple molars
✔ Dietary risk factors suspected
Treatment Prioritization
1️⃣ Immediate Phase
- Caries removal from 46
- Establish access for drainage
- Irrigate with NaOCl
- Place a strong temporary restoration
- Needed to stabilize tooth
- Prevent further structural loss
- Allow rubber dam isolation for future RCT
2️⃣ Stabilization Phase
- Remove active caries in all molars
- Restore with temporary materials quadrant-wise
- Prevent progression to pulp exposure
3️⃣ Preventive Phase
- Full diet analysis
- Oral hygiene instruction
- Fluoride measures
- Behaviour modification
4️⃣ Definitive Restorative Phase
- RCT + core build-up on 46
- Hybrid GIC/composite restorations in other molars
- Crown or long-term indirect restoration may be needed on 46
Temporary Restoration Options
| Material | Features | Ideal Use |
|---|---|---|
| Zinc oxide–eugenol | Easy, bactericidal, weak | Temporary coverage with low occlusal load |
| Cavit/Coltosol | Self-sealing, good strength | Endo access cavities |
| Polycarboxylate cement | Adhesive, durable | Poor retention cavities, rubber dam support |
| Glass Ionomer | Adhesive, fluoride release, durable | Heavily broken-down teeth, base for composite |
Why Was This One Molar Destroyed So Quickly?
Possible reasons:
- Previous large restoration undermined cusps
- Marginal leakage due to poor sealing
- Caries not fully removed earlier
- Rapid progression in a diet high in fermentable carbohydrates
Ensuring Complete Caries Removal
- Remove all soft dentine at DEJ
- Hard, stained dentine may be left near pulp if sealed well
- Beware large pulp chambers in teenagers
- If symptoms of pulpitis emerge → consider elective RCT
Preventive Priority: Dietary Analysis
The most important intervention is:
🔸 Accurate 4-Day Diet Analysis
Because restricting sugar frequency is far more effective than OHI or fluoride alone.
Lifestyle considerations:
Teens often consume:
- Sweetened drinks
- Frequent snacks
- High-carb budget foods
- Irregular meals
- Sweet drinks during late-night study sessions
DIETARY CHART (You Will Add Later)
➡ [Insert Dietary Chart Placeholder]
Analysing the Patient’s Diet
When reviewing the 4-day diary:
- Highlight sugary foods
- Count sugar attacks per day
- Note timing (bedtime sugars dangerous)
- Identify hidden sugars (cereals, sauces, biscuits)
- Classify food consistency (sticky, retentive, slow-clearance)
Likely causes for this patient:
✔ Excess sweetened drinks
✔ Frequent snacking
✔ Multiple daily sugar exposures
✔ Poor clearance foods
Dietary Advice (Based on Health-Belief Model)
Key recommendations:
- Reduce sugar frequency rather than total elimination
- Reserve sugary foods for mealtimes only
- Replace snacks with safer options (nuts, cheese, sugar-free gum)
- Switch to sugar-free drinks
- Use fluoride toothpaste + weekly fluoride rinse
- Avoid sugary drinks before bed
- Finish meals with water, gum, or cheese
Definitive Restoration Plan
For 46 (Non-vital Molar):
- Complete RCT
- Place deep core build-up
- Consider cuspal coverage (crown)
Long-term issues:
- Mesial drift & tilting may cause food impaction
- Risk of distal caries on 45
- Crown may improve contour but orthodontic uprighting is the ideal solution
For Other Molars:
- Remove all caries
- Restore using:
- Radiopaque GIC base
- Composite overlay
- Preserve maximum tooth structure
(Insert Post-operative Radiograph Placeholder)
➡ [Space for Figure: Post-Op X-ray]
Why Not Extract the Tooth?
Extraction may be valid but not ideal because:
- Teenager has multiple molar lesions—preservation is important
- Replacement options (bridge, implant) are costly
- Space may affect occlusion long-term
- Patient wishes to save the tooth
Conclusion
This case demonstrates how quickly a previously healthy dentition can deteriorate due to dietary habits, lack of follow-up, and hidden occlusal caries. Successful management requires:
✔ Immediate stabilization
✔ Full-mouth caries control
✔ Prevention-driven behaviour change
✔ Well-planned definitive restorations
To master such case-based dentistry or prepare for BDS/postgraduate exams, explore structured learning at MedCrack Academy.
