Thorough pain assessment, along with thermal and mechanical testing, are the primary diagnostic tools used to assess the status of pulp and periapical tissues in teeth with potential endodontic pathology. This study evaluated predictors of acute odontogenic pain to better understand the relationship between endodontic pain, clinical testing, endodontic disease, and diagnoses.
Participants (n= 228) presenting with acute odontogenic pain underwent standardized clinical testing and reported their pain intensity. Univariate and multiple regression analysis were performed to evaluate the predictors of acute endodontic pain. Chi-square tests with Bonferroni adjustments were conducted to measure the frequency of endodontic diagnostic test findings and clinical observations in patients with different pulpal diagnoses.
A negative response to cold stimulation on the causative tooth, and percussion hypersensitivity on the healthy adjacent tooth, were the strongest predictors of higher levels of acute endodontic pain. Percussion hypersensitivity on the healthy adjacent tooth was present in a quarter of the cohort and was reported with equal frequency in teeth diagnosed with irreversible pulpitis, necrotic pulp and previously initiated/treated teeth. While painful percussion on the causative tooth was more frequently reported in teeth diagnosed with a necrotic pulp, painful palpation was more frequently reported on teeth diagnosed with previously initiated/treated teeth.
Percussion hypersensitivity on the healthy adjacent tooth may reveal a lowered pain threshold and heightened pain sensitization. It is also possible that the two commonly performed mechanical sensory tests, percussion and palpation hypersensitivity, may detect different aspects of endodontic pathophysiology and pain processing.

Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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