lingual nerve injury: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

lingual nerve injury is damage to the lingual nerve, a sensory nerve that supplies feeling to the front part of the tongue and the floor of the mouth. It can change normal sensation, including numbness, tingling, burning, or altered taste. It is most often discussed in dentistry and oral surgery because the lingual nerve runs close to common treatment areas in the lower jaw. Clinicians use the term when documenting symptoms, explaining risks, and planning follow-up after dental procedures.

inferior alveolar nerve injury: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

inferior alveolar nerve injury is damage or irritation affecting the inferior alveolar nerve, a major sensory nerve in the lower jaw (mandible). It can change feeling in the lower teeth, gums, lower lip, and chin on the affected side. It is most often discussed in dental care because the nerve runs inside the mandibular canal near common treatment areas. It may occur after dental procedures, facial trauma, or swelling/infection near the nerve.

nerve injury: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

A nerve injury is a disturbance to how a nerve carries sensation (feeling) or motor signals (movement). In dentistry, nerve injury most often refers to altered feeling in the lip, chin, tongue, or gums after dental treatment or trauma. The term is also used for irritation of the tooth’s internal nerve tissue (the dental pulp), which can cause sensitivity or pain. Clinicians use the concept of nerve injury to describe symptoms, track recovery, and communicate risk around procedures near nerves.

radial forearm free flap: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

A radial forearm free flap is a piece of living tissue moved from the forearm to another body area using microsurgery. It is “free” because its blood vessels are disconnected and then reconnected to new vessels at the reconstruction site. In oral and maxillofacial care, it is commonly used to rebuild soft-tissue defects in the mouth and throat after disease or injury. The goal is to restore lining, shape, and function (such as speech and swallowing) as much as possible.

fibula free flap: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

A fibula free flap is a surgical tissue transfer that uses bone from the fibula (the smaller bone in the lower leg) to rebuild missing jaw or facial bone. It is called “free” because the bone and its blood vessels are disconnected and then reconnected to blood vessels in the head and neck using microsurgery. In dentistry and oral surgery, it is most commonly used to reconstruct the mandible (lower jaw) after cancer surgery, trauma, or severe bone loss. It can also create a foundation for future dental rehabilitation, including implant-supported teeth in selected cases.

free flap reconstruction: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

free flap reconstruction is a surgical method that rebuilds missing tissue by moving a “flap” of living tissue from one part of the body to another. The tissue is reconnected to blood vessels at the new site using microsurgery to restore blood flow. It is commonly used in head and neck care, including the jaw, tongue, floor of mouth, and throat after cancer surgery or major injury. In dental and oral surgery settings, it may support chewing, speech, swallowing, and later dental rehabilitation.

facial reconstruction: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

facial reconstruction is a dental restorative approach used to rebuild the visible front (facial) surface of a tooth. It commonly uses tooth-colored resin materials bonded to enamel and dentin to restore shape, strength, and appearance. It is often performed after decay, chipping, wear, or old restoration replacement on front-facing tooth surfaces. It can be used in both cosmetic-oriented and function-oriented dental treatment plans.

platelet-rich plasma (aesthetics): Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

platelet-rich plasma (aesthetics) is a patient’s own blood product that is processed to concentrate platelets in a small volume of plasma. It is used in aesthetic and regenerative-focused care to support soft-tissue healing and tissue quality. In dentistry, it may be used around the gums (gingiva) and oral soft tissues, and sometimes alongside cosmetic facial procedures performed in dental settings. It is not a synthetic “filler” material; it is an autologous biologic preparation (made from the same patient).

PRP facial: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

PRP facial is a procedure that uses platelet-rich plasma (PRP) prepared from a person’s own blood. The PRP is applied to facial skin—often by injection and/or alongside microneedling—as a biologic adjunct. It is commonly discussed in facial aesthetics and, in some practices, in dentistry-focused orofacial aesthetics. Its goal is generally to support skin quality or healing, with outcomes that vary by clinician and case.

hyaluronic acid filler: Definition, Uses, and Clinical Overview

hyaluronic acid filler is an injectable gel made from hyaluronic acid, a substance naturally found in human tissues. It is used to add volume, improve soft-tissue contours, or smooth folds—most commonly around the mouth and lower face. In some settings it is provided in dental or oral–facial practices as an adjunct to cosmetic and restorative dental care. It is not a “tooth filling” material, even though the word *filler* can sound similar.