Third molar teeth (commonly referred to aswisdom teeth) consist of the mandibular andmaxillary third molars; they usually appear between the ages of 17 and 25. They are called wisdom teeth because usually they come in when a person is between age 17 and 25 or older—old enough to have supposedly gained some wisdom.
Wisdom teeth are commonly extracted when they affect other teeth—this impaction is colloquially known as “coming in sideways.”Most adults have four wisdom teeth, but it is possible to have more or fewer. Absence of one or more wisdom teeth is an example of hypodontia. Any extra teeth are referred to as supernumerary teeth.

Impacted wisdom teeth fall into one of several categories. Mesioangular impaction is the most common form (44%), and means the tooth is angled forward, towards the front of the mouth. Vertical impaction (38%) occurs when the formed tooth does not erupt fully through the gum line.Distoangular impaction (6%) means the tooth is angled backward, towards the rear of the mouth. And finally, Horizontal impaction (3%) is the least common form, which occurs when the tooth is angled fully ninety degrees forward, growing into the roots of the second molar.

Typically distoangular impactions are the easiest to extract in the maxillaand most difficult to extract in the mandible, while
mesioangular impactions are the most difficult to extract in the maxilla and easiest to extract in the mandible. Frequently, a fully erupted upper wisdom tooth requires bone removal if the tooth does not yield easily to forceps or elevators. Failure to remove distal or buccal bone while removing one of these teeth can cause the entire maxillary tuberosity to be fractured off and thereby the tearing out the floor of the maxillary sinus.

Impacted wisdom teeth may also be categorized on whether they are still completely encased in the jawbone. If it is completely encased in the jawbone, it is a bony impaction. If the wisdom tooth has erupted out of the jawbone but not through the gumline, it is called a softtissue impaction.Sometimes the wisdom tooth fails to erupt completely through the gum bed and the gum at the back of the wisdom tooth extends over the biting surface, forming a soft tissue flap or lid around the tooth called an operculum. Teeth covered by an operculum can be difficult to clean with atoothbrush. Additional cleaning techniques can include using a needle-less plastic syringe to vigorously wash the tooth with moderately pressured water or to softly wash it with hydrogen peroxide.
However, debris and bacteria can easily accumulate under an operculum, which may cause pericoronitis, a common infection problem
in young adults with partial impactions that is often exacerbated by occlusion with opposing 3rd or 2nd molars. Common symptoms include a swelling and redness of the gum around the eruption site, difficulty in opening the mouth, a bad odor or taste in the mouth, and pain in the general area which may also run down the entire lowerjaw or possibly the neck. Untreated pericoronitis can progress to a much more severe infection.

If the operculum does not disappear, recommended treatment is extraction of the wisdom tooth. An alternative treatment involving removal of theoperculum, called operculectomy, has been advocated. There is a high risk of permanent or temporary numbness of the tongue due to damage of the nerve with this treatment and it is no longer recommended as a standard treatment in oral surgery.
The oldest known impacted wisdom tooth belonged to a European woman of the Magdalenian period (18,000 – 10,000 BP)
Extraction

A panoramic x-ray (OPG) is the best x-ray to view wisdom teeth and diagnose problems.

Post-extraction problems

Bleeding and oozing


Wisdom teeth are a valuable asset to the mouth when they are healthy and properly positioned. Often, however, problems develop that require their removal. When the jaw isn’t large enough to accommodate wisdom teeth, they can become impacted (unable to come in or misaligned). Wisdom teeth may grow sideways, emerge only part way from the gum or remain trapped beneath the gum and bone.
Dry socket

Swelling

Nerve injury

- The inferior alveolar nerve, which enters the mandible at the mandibular foramen and exits the mandible at the sides of the chin from the mental foramen. This nerve supplies sensation to the lower teeth on the right or left half of the dental arch, as well as sense of touch to the right or left half of the chin and lower lip.
- The lingual nerve, which branches off the mandibular branches of thetrigeminal nerve and courses just inside the jaw bone, entering the tongue and supplying sense of touch and taste to the right and left half of the anterior 2/3 of the tongue as well as the lingual gingiva (i.e. the gums on the inside surface of the dental arch).
Such injuries can occur while lifting teeth (typically the inferior alveolar) but are most commonly caused by inadvertent damage with a surgical drill. Such injuries are rare and are usually temporary. Depending on the type of injury (i.e. Seddon classification: neuropraxia, axonotmesis, and neurotmesis) they can be prolonged or permanent.
Etymology of “wisdom teeth”
They are generally thought to be called wisdom teeth because they appear so late—much later than the other teeth, at an age where
people are presumably wiser than as a child, when the other teeth erupt. The English wisdom tooth is derived from Latin dens sapientiae. The same root is shared by numerous other languages. There exists a Dutch folk etymology which states that that the Dutch word for wisdom tooth verstandskies is derived from “far-standing” (ver-staand) molar, and that mistranslations of the Dutch word (in which verstandtranslates to wisdom) are the root for corresponding words in other European languages.

Turkish refers directly to the age at which wisdom teeth appear and calls it20 yaş dişi (20th year tooth). In Arabic, its name is Ders-al-a’qel (ضرس العقل), literally meaning “The tooth of the mind” and hence similar to occidental names. In Korean, its name is Sa-rang-nee (사랑니, love teeth) referring to the young age and the pain of the first love. In Japanese, its name isOyashirazu (親知らず), literally meaning “unknown to the parents,” from the idea that they erupt after a child has moved away. The Indonesian term gigi bungsu for the last teeth a person cuts refers to bungsu, meaning “youngest child”, because the teeth erupt so much later than the others, implying that the teeth are “younger” than the rest. In Thailand, the wisdom tooth is described fan-khut (ฟันคุด) “huddling tooth” due to its shortage of space. In Persian (Farsi), its name is “dandan-e aghl” (دندان عقل), which means “wisdom tooth”. In many Spanish speaking countries, it is called the “molar of judgment” (muela de juicio). This is because when they appear, the person is considered to have a better judgment than that of a child. A similar phrase is commonly used in Italian, as the tooth is called “dente del giudizio” (judgment tooth). In Maltese the molar is called “darsa ta’ l-għaqal” which is the translation of wisdom tooth. However some refer to it as “darsa ta’ l-għaqad” which means “the molar that joins”, possibly referring to the fact that it completes the set of molars. In Greek, it called“φρονιμίτης” (fronimitis), which means the same with the other languages. As in many others languages the Portuguese name for the 3rd molar is related with judgment and is “dente do siso”.
Extraction of wisdom teeth is generally recommended when:
- Wisdom teeth only partially erupt. This leaves an opening for bacteria to enter around the tooth and cause an infection. Pain, swelling, jaw stiffness and general illness can result.
- There is a chance that poorly aligned wisdom teeth will damage adjacent teeth.
- A cyst (fluid-filled sac) forms, destroying surrounding structures such as bone or tooth roots.
Patients should ask the dentist about the health and positioning of their wisdom teeth. The dentist may make a recommendation for removal or send the patient to an oral surgeon for further evaluation. 

Wisdom teeth are a valuable asset to the mouth when they are healthy and properly positioned. Often, however, problems develop that require their removal. When the jaw isn’t large enough to accommodate wisdom teeth, they can become impacted (unable to come in or misaligned). Wisdom teeth may grow sideways, emerge only part way from the gum or remain trapped beneath the gum and bone.
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