What is root canal treatment?
Root canal therapy refers to the process by which a dentist
treats the inner aspects of a tooth, specifically that
area inside a tooth that is occupied by its "pulp
tissue." Most people would probably refer to a
tooth's pulp tissue as its "nerve." While a
tooth's pulp tissue does contain nerve fibers it is also
composed of arteries, veins, lymph vessels, and
connective tissue.
For the purposes of this
discussion, so to use terminology that people seem to
be most familiar with, we will use the terms
"nerve" and "nerve tissue" to
refer to a tooth's pulp tissue.
Where precisely in a tooth is its nerve?
Teeth
are hard calcified objects but their inner aspects are
not completely solid. Inside every tooth there lies a
hollow space which, when a tooth is healthy, contains
the tooth's nerve tissue. Dentists use the following
terms to refer to various portions of this nerve area
- The pulp chamber.
- This is a hollow space that lies more or less in
the center of the tooth.
- The root canals.
- Each tooth's nerve enters the tooth, in general,
at the very tip of its root(s). From this entry
point the nerve then runs through the center of the
root in small "root canals" which
subsequently join up with the tooth's pulp chamber.
What is the function of a tooth's nerve tissue?
Initially a tooth's nerve tissue plays an important role
in the formation and development of the tooth. Then,
once the tooth has formed, the function of this tissue
becomes one of helping to preserve the tooth's health
and vitality. The nerve tissue keeps the organic
components of the tooth's mineralized tissues (dentin
and enamel) supplied with nutrients and moisture. The
nerve tissue also produces new tooth structure
(reparative dentin) as is needed so to help to wall off
and protect the nerve from insult or injury
(such as advancing tooth decay).
A tooth's nerve tissue does provide a sensory
function but this role is probably different from what
you expect. Under normal circumstances the nerves inside
our teeth provide us with very little information. Yes,
when activated by extremes in pressure, temperature, or
severe insult (such as a cracked tooth or advancing
tooth decay) teeth do respond with a painful sensation.
But under normal circumstances the nerves inside our
teeth remain relatively "quiet."
At this point you might be thinking that if you push
on your tooth with a finger or close your teeth together
you will feel a pressure sensation. Because of this you
might assume that that sensation must come from the
nerve inside the tooth. Well, in reality, that sensation
comes from the nerves found in the ligament that binds
the tooth to the jawbone, not from inside the tooth
itself. This implies then, from a standpoint of the
normal functions we perform with our teeth, that the
presence of a live nerve inside a tooth is somewhat
academic. If a tooth's nerve tissue is present and
healthy, wonderful. But if a tooth has had its nerve
tissue removed as a part of root canal treatment then
that's fine too. You will never miss it.