Pivot tooth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The pivot tooth[1][2] is a fixed dental prosthesis used to rebuild a tooth. It is a type of crown-root foundation, but it is an independent supplement and usually consists of a pin or peg and a full crown[3] permanently connected (i.e., without cement) and placed in the patient's oral cavity during a single visit.[4] It often includes a protective element called a ferrule.[5]
Pivot teeth were developed to shorten the execution cycle and skip some laboratory steps.[1] Although they could last for many years when used according to indications and contraindications,[6] pivot teeth did not meet the requirements and are no longer used.[1] Better results are achieved by permanently cementing the crown-root foundation and further crafting the crown as if it were a natural tooth stump prepared for the crown. Otherwise, the laboratory connection of the crown to the foundation carries a greater risk of inaccuracies, subsequent crown leakage, cement washout, and tooth decay.[4]
At the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, dentists made the first attempts to replace single tooth gaps using pegs anchored in the root canal of the tooth. However, due to the lack of appropriate dental cements or adhesives, they were fastened on gold or platinum foil, as well as linen, cotton, and silk. Recommendations from individual scientists (L. Koecker, B. Rush, T. Kaczorowski) quickly emerged to first treat the tooth root due to the odontogenic focal infection theory.[2]
In the mid-19th century, new methods of pin fixation emerged: a gold pin on gold foil (Gustav Blume, 1850) and on gutta-percha (J. Taft, 1859). In 1880, Casius M. Richmond patented the pivot tooth with a ferrule and his own porcelain firing method. At the same time, pivot teeth by Marshall L. Logan gained significant popularity.[2]
Regardless of the development of pivot teeth, the technique of restoring a tooth with a full crown on the stump of the patient's own tooth developed independently,[2] which is still used today.
Structure




A pivot tooth consists of a pin inserted into a prepared root canal of the tooth and a complete prosthetic crown permanently attached to this pin, rebuilding the entire tooth crown. Some pivot teeth have a third element, called a ferrule, which is a root cap protecting the supportive surface of the root from decay.[7] Depending on the presence of this ferrule, pivot teeth can be divided into two groups:
- Without protection of the root supportive surface – pivot teeth with a porcelain crown (e.g., Davis pivot tooth, Logan pivot tooth)[2] or with an acrylic crown.[5] In the Davis pivot tooth, the crown is not previously permanently attached to the pin. The dentist applies it to the pin during the same visit when the pin is cemented into the patient's tooth.[5]
- With protection of the root supportive surface – pivot teeth with a Richmond ferrule (e.g., Richmond pivot tooth, invented by Casius M. Richmond in 1880) or a Schröder ferrule (e.g., Schrödera pivot tooth), used with an acrylic crown, metal-acrylic composite crown, or metal-porcelain crown.[8] The ferrule is used to protect the tooth from decay, from mechanical injury in the case of a deep bite, and in case it's necessary to connect the pivot tooth with metal parts of further prosthetic elements.[9]
The pin is typically metal[4] – platinum (formerly) or steel under a porcelain crown, 18-karat gold, gold-platinum alloy, or steel under an acrylic crown.[10] The Richmond ferrule consists of gold components (18 or 22 karats) and gold solder (18 or 20 karats respectively); the Schröder ferrule consists of 20-karat gold, a gold-platinum alloy, or chromium-nickel steel.[11] The crown can be metal, acrylic, composite, or porcelain.[9]
Indications and contraindications
Indications for performing a pivot tooth mostly overlap with today's indications for full crowns: destruction of the tooth crown (due to decay or trauma), concern about mechanical damage (numerous fillings with thin walls), pathological changes in enamel (discoloration, erosion, Hutchinson's teeth), and anchoring for a bridge.[12]
Pivot teeth without a ferrule are indicated when there is no tendency for decay, the root of the tooth is intact, and in a simple or deep bite where the front teeth (upper and lower) do not touch each other.[5]
They can be used in all teeth except molars. It is important to relieve the incisal edges of the pivot teeth and consider using this restoration in a deep bite.[6]