Kuttner's syndrome (synonyms: sclerosing inflammation of submandibular salivary glands, Kuttner's "inflammatory tumor") was described in 1897 by N. Kuttner as a disease involving a simultaneous increase in both the submaxillary glands, whose clinical picture resembles a tumor process.
Like any other surgical intervention, the extraction of the tooth may not go well and smoothly. In addition to bleeding, the following complications occur after tooth extraction: swelling, infectious inflammation at the site of removal, temperature.
Implantation of teeth implies the replacement of the roots of lost teeth, that is, the installation of a special design in the bone tissue of the jaw in place of missing teeth.
With the development of diseases of the mouth, the patient is often disturbed by symptoms such as swelling and bleeding gums. If the gingiva is swelling or bleeding, this may be a sign of the onset of diseases such as periodontitis, gingivitis or periodontitis.
Gum disease, according to international statistics, most often affects people over the age of thirty-five years. In the early stages of the disease, pain may be absent or mild.
Heerfordt syndrome (syn: uveoparotitis, uveoparotid fever was described in 1409 by CF Heerfordt as a symptom complex, including parotid enlargement, uveal tract damage (iridocyclits, uveitis), subfebrile fever.
Mikulich disease (synonyms: sarcoid sialosis, Mikulic allergic reticuloepithelial sialosis, lymphomyeloid sialosis, lymphocytic tumor) is named after the doctor J. Miculicz, who in 1892 described the increase in all the large and small salivary glands as well as the lacrimal glands he observed on For 14 months the peasant has 42 years.
Periodontitis is an inflammatory disease in which tissue destruction occurs that surround and hold the tooth in the dental hole - gums, periodontal, cement and alveolar processes.
Removal of milk teeth is used by dentists only in the most extreme cases, when a child's tooth can not be saved. The most common reason for having to part with milk teeth is inflammation in the mouth, when the surrounding roots or directly the roots are affected.