# Unveiling an Uncommon Scenario of Co-occurrence of Multiple Odontomes With Impacted Maxillary Lateral Incisor and Canine in a 17-Year-Old Girl: A Unique and Rare Case Report

**Authors:** Hitesh Sawant, Parag V Gangurde, Sneha Padmakarrao Masne, Sheetal M Jadhav, Amit Patil, Shreyas Shah, Sayem A Mulla, Saba Kondkari

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.61435 · Cureus · 2024-05-31

## TL;DR

A 17-year-old girl presented with a rare case of multiple odontomes causing impacted permanent teeth, requiring careful surgical and orthodontic treatment.

## Contribution

This case report highlights a rare co-occurrence of multiple odontomes and impacted teeth, emphasizing the need for precise diagnosis and treatment planning.

## Key findings

- Multiple odontomes were found to be associated with impacted maxillary lateral incisors and canines.
- Histopathological evaluation confirmed the presence of compound odontomes.
- Surgical removal and orthodontic traction were performed to preserve alveolar bone and prevent complications.

## Abstract

This case report presents the enigma of multiple odontomes with overretained deciduous teeth leading to the impaction of permanent successors (22, 23) in an abnormal position in a 17-year-old female patient who reported the chief complaint of maligned teeth. Permanent maxillary canines and lateral incisors are the most common teeth to face the brunt of impaction due to a wide range of etiological factors. It is imperative for a clinician to diagnose cases at an early stage to accelerate the rate of eruption of such teeth. This is especially important in cases where initially the etiology seems to be simple but on careful and judicious evaluation of the case, numerous other etiologies are found to map together for the underlying pathology. This case discusses how the presence of multiple odontomes with delayed exfoliation of deciduous teeth leads to the impaction of a permanent successor. Understanding the underlying pathology is seemingly important to devise intricate treatment mechanics for traction of impacted teeth without taxing anchorage from dental units and taking cognizance of the amount of alveolar bone loss post-removal of multiple odontomes. The appropriate thickness of alveolar bone scaffolding is required for the canine to extrude down, with an adequate band of marginal gingiva encircling the cement-enamel junction of the impacted canine, preventing any kind of fenestration and dehiscence. Hence, meticulous care was taken during surgical exposure and removal of odontomes to preserve an adequate labial cortical plate intact for traction. These excavated tooth-like structures were later subjected to histopathological evaluation, which confirmed the diagnosis of compound odontomes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Odontomes (MESH:D014071), alveolar bone loss (MESH:D016301)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

10 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11214756/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11214756