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Head & Face Medicine 2006
Endoscopically assisted procedure for removal of a foreign body from the maxillary sinus and contemporary endodontic surgical treatment of the toothAbstract: A 33-year-old woman was seen for a chronic pain in the region of tooth 26 in June 2005. She had treatment to the root canal of her left upper first molar in 2002. The patient's history indicated also previous symptoms in the last two years of maxillary sinusitis including tenderness in the left infraorbital region and nasal stuffiness.Clinical examination identified pain in the region of the left upper first molar and an orthopantomography showed a radiopacity of the left maxillary sinus (Fig. 1). Computed tomography showed the presence of a foreign body located in the supero medial aspect of the maxillary sinus, near the natural maxillary ostium and it looked like a residual endodontic cement. A partial mucosal thickening of the sinus upon the roots of the upper first molar was also present (Fig. 2). Videorinoscopy showed hypertrophy of the inferior turbinates bilaterally. The surgical plan was to remove the foreign body with contemporary treatment of the odontogenic source. In July 2005 with the patient under general anesthesia, standard surgical technique was used to create a small osteotomy in the lateral antral wall upon the roots of the upper first left molar. The antrum was examined through the endoscope and the foreign body was easily identified and gently removed (Fig. 3, 4). A contemporary endodontic surgical treatment of the upper first left molar roots and an endoscopic reduction of inferior turbinates were performed (Fig. 5). Direct examination of the foreign body confirmed that it was a residual endodontic cement. Her postoperative course was satisfactory with no evidence of sinus infection.Removal of foreign bodies through an endonasal endoscopic approach is the treatment of choice [1]. Endoscopically assisted Caldwell-Luc procedure for removal of a surgical bur from the maxillary sinus was also described [2]. There has been no previous report about endoscopic removal of a filling agent migrated from the root canal into the maxillary sinus. Migration
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