Parminides,
I cannot enlarge this xray but it does look like tooth #9 and 10 have problems. It looks like there is an infection in the bone around both of those teeth. Tooth #7 is not on this x-ray. The root of #9 appears to be disintegrating. Surely you have been informed about these teeth by at least one of the dentists you have seen??
Yea, that piece of wisdom tooth on the lower right is not in a good place. If you had drainage on that side then that would indicate an infection and that could be why that area is so dark on the xray. I think this needs further evaluation as well as the upper front.
Bacteria from an abscessed tooth does not have to follow any particular pathway especially if it is draining out through the gum. So that could be why the infection from #19 didn't end up in your lymph nodes under your neck on that side.
Bryanna
Quote:
Originally Posted by parminides
Thank you so much for your detailed reply.
I remember that all four wisdom teeth were pulled at one time, and that the dentist had a lot of trouble with one. This was about twenty years ago, and I don't remember if he told me that he left a piece. But I haven't had any trouble from there.
I'm attaching an xray from last August of the #8 area of my mouth. See what you think about it.
I think I see what you suspect might be a crack in #19. It was an endodontist who said the tooth was cracked (after a general dentist said he suspected a crack). The endodontist did not show me on the xray. I was in pain and ready for some relief and wasn't too skeptical or interested in challenging him. If it was cracked, I have no idea how I got it.
I don't think the dark area on the right side of my mandible has gotten larger, although it's hard to say for sure since every x-ray has its own artifacts, etc. In September 2012, with the root tip still inside, the extraction site of #19 burst like a blister and drained completely. The swelling was gone and the area felt normal for the first time since the tooth had been pulled.
For a brief period it wasn't draining. During that period I noticed drainage coming from the dark area on the right side (which I've dubbed the mandibular swamp!). Apparently that drainagae source had been "drowned out" by the #19 drainage before then.
The general consensus is that the mandibular swamp is just a normal variation between my right side and left side. That seems strange to me, but that's what I've heard over and over. The way some people put it is that my nerve canal is wider on that side. It's very evident in the CT scans was well. It's like a cave on the right side.
One oral surgeon said the drainage I once perceived in that area might be discharge from a deep periodontal pocket. That same oral surgeon later said it might be a tumor or neoplasm and wanted to do a deep bone biopsy. I never let him do it because I lost confidence in that guy, who was really the only one who's seen me who ever thought that dark area might be bad.
Are you starting to understand that my mouth is a riddle wrapped in a mystery, surrounded by an enigma?
The track on the image of #19 pre-extraction (that I outlined in yellow) has bugged me to no end. Notice that there's overlapping bone to the left of it but none to the right. It just doesn't make any sense to me at all. Dentists have tried to explain to me that it's the angle of the camera, it's 3-D compressed to 2-D, etc. But no explanation convinces me that the overlapping bone should just abruptly stop like that.
When I was asking about the spread of infection, I just meant by the simple pathway of infection in #19 root channels spreading to mandibular canal and then traveling along the canal into the neck, just because there's a clear pathway. I've wondered why the infection didn't do that.
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