Thursday, January 31, 2013

Kid History: "Healthy Food"

MouthHealthy.org is Now Live

This has some really useful information on it, try it out!


MouthHealthy.org, the ADA’s new website for consumers, has information you need to take better care of your mouth today so it will take care of you for life.
Visit your life stage and find healthy habits, top concerns, nutrition and fact or fiction.


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

We found this new post by the ADA helpful and interesting

 

 SHOULD I TAKE ANTIBIOTICS BEFORE MY DENTAL PROCEDURE?
 
You have an orthopedic implant (joint replacement, metal plates or rods, etc.) from a previous orthopaedic surgery.

• A potential complication of these implants is bacterial infection, which occurs in approximately 1-3% of patients. These infections require more surgery as well as antibiotic usage for an extended period of time. Most infections occur around the time of the procedure (within one year), but some have occurred much later.
• In theory, late implant infections are caused by the spread of the bacteria from the blood stream to the implant. Unfortunately, there is no clear scientific evidence to support this theory. We know that many patients with orthopedic implants frequently have bacteria in their blood that does not spread to their implants.
Dental procedures have long been considered a potential cause of implant infections even after the initial orthopedic postoperative period. This is because dental procedures can introduce bacteria from the mouth into the bloodstream. However, this fact should be considered in the context that eating and performing oral hygiene at home may also introduce oral bacteria into the blood.
• Traditionally, antibiotics have been provided prior to dental procedures in patients with orthopaedic implants to minimize the bacteria that get into the blood.
• Best evidence, however, does not show that antibiotics provided before oral care help prevent infections of orthopedic implants.
• The routine use of antibiotics in this manner has potential side-effects such as increased bacterial resistance, allergic reactions, diarrhea, and may even cause death.
Patients who have compromised immune systems might be at greater risk for implant infections;
• Diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, chemotherapy, chronic steroid use are examples suggesting immunosuppression. Please discuss your potential for immunosuppression with your physician or dentist.
• Patients who are immune-compromised might wish to consider antibiotics before dental procedures because of their greater risk for infection.
• Decisions with regard to antibiotic premedication should be made by patients, dentists and physicians in a context of open communication and informed consent.





Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Correction to the previous sedation post

Just a small correction - In one section I indicated you need a class III permit for oral sedation.  In the next paragraph I show where the Utah law indicates you need a class II permit with additional training for oral sedation.  To clarify - you do not need a class III permit for oral sedation in Utah.  Thanks

What is sedation or "sleep" dentistry?

In this post I will try to quickly and clearly explain what sedation and anxiolysis mean in dentistry.  This is not designed to be a legal or complete explanation but hopefully will help people understand what they hear on those radio adds.

First some definitions -
     Anxiolysis - the process of decreasing a persons anxiety with medications.  This just takes the edge off so the person is a little more relaxed.
     Sedation -  Also called conscious sedation is a minimally depressed level of consciousness but the person can still breath on their own and respond to verbal commands (like open wider, turn this way, etc) and is produced by pharmacological (medications) means .
     Oral Sedation - same as sedation above but the person takes pills or has a pill dissolve under their tongue
     IV sedation - same as sedation above but the person has an IV and the medication is given directly through the IV.
     Deep sedation and General Anesthesia - Controlled state of depressed consciousness with partial (deep) or total (General) loss of protective reflexes (no gag reflex and you may not breath for yourself or respond to verbal or physical commands) caused by medications.

Now to the purpose - sedation dentistry allows the dentist to work more effectively because the patient is calm and comfortable with the use of medications given orally (swallow a pill) Sublingually (pill placed under the tongue) or through an IV.

Medications - there are a multitude of medications used but most are the benzodiazepine class such as Valium or halcion.  Other medications include antihistamines like hydroxyzine and insomnia medications like zaleplon.

Now to the laws in Utah - the exact laws can be found at
http://dopl.utah.gov/laws/R156-69.pdf which is the Utah department of professional licencing.  Here is a quick summary -
First a dentist must have the appropriate training. In Utah there are 4 anesthesia classes or permits. A class II permit is required for using nitrous oxide (laughing gas) and anxiolysis (lower dose of a medication taken the night before a procedure or one hour before a procedure to calm the person - but additional medications are not given)
Class III permit is required for Oral sedation - this often uses the same medication given for anxiolysis but in a higher dose, in repeated doses, or dissolved under the tongue (it absorbs faster than through the stomach) until you get the person more comfortable.
Class IV permit requires much more training and is needed for deeper sedation - often the dentist can bring in a nurse anesthetist or anesthesiologist for deeper sedation.

Most dentists can get a class II permit with their training in dental school and with the DEA licence to prescribe medications or to provide nitrous oxide and anxiolysis.  They can also give minimal sedation with a Class II permit if they can show 16 hours of training.

Utah just passed a law concerning oral sedation -
Effective February 7, 2011: Utah Administrative Code § R156-69-202 requires dentists to complete at least 16 hours of instructive classroom training with clinically-oriented experiences and obtain a Class 2 permit before providing their patients with minimal sedation using oral sedatives (with or without nitrous)*

A Class III permit requires 60 hours of additional training and at least 20 supervised cases for IV sedation. 
In any type of sedation the patient should be monitored with pulse, oxygen, and blood pressure during the procedure. 
All patients that take even an anxiolytic medication should have someone there to drive them after the procedure. 

At Bauman Endodontics we offer the full range of services with Dr Bauman providing nitrous oxide and anxiolytic medications if needed before a procedure.  Most patients who are anxious do very well with a pill one hour before the procedure.  We also have an anesthesiologist that can come to the office for someone who wants sedation or deeper sedation.  The sedation has additional costs but may be worth it for some patients.

Finally - what about the adds I hear that promote "sleep dentistry"!  The object of sedation dentistry is not to put the person to sleep or to make sure they are "out" - sometimes people relax enough to fall asleep but that is just very relaxed.  The goal is to sedate or relax a person.  To really put a person to "sleep" in the anesthesia realm requires a general or deep sedation.

Sorry this is a long post!  Hope it is informative.  If you have specific questions or want more information posted about this subject please e-mail you questions to baumanendo@gmail.com

If you want more details about Dr Bauman or endodontics (root canals) you can contact Bauman Endodontics at 801-590-8687 or visit the website at www.baumanendo.com.