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Pain management following dental trauma and surgical procedures

Journal

DENTAL TRAUMATOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 295-303

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/edt.12840

Keywords

anesthesia; anxiety; NSAID; pain control; paracetamol

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Surgical procedures and post-traumatic management of dental patients require effective pain management during and after treatment. Pain intensity is highest approximately 5-6 hours after completion of the procedure and peaks on the first postoperative day. The greatest consumption of pain medication occurs during the first 48-72 hours after third molar extraction.
Surgical procedures and post-traumatic management of dental patients require effective pain management during treatment, but being considerably more invasive than conservative treatments, pain management is required into the postoperative period. Clinical trials on pain intensity following dental surgical procedures (e.g., 3rd molar extraction, implant placement, periodontal, and endodontic surgery) have shown that pain is most intense approximately 5-6 h after completion of the procedure, reaching its peak levels during the first postoperative day. Greatest consumption of analgesics occurs during the first 48-72 h after 3rd molar extraction. For the management of perioperative pain associated with either conservative or surgical dental treatment, the local anesthetics articaine, lidocaine, mepivacaine, and prilocaine are preferred. These drugs, with a vasoconstrictor, provide a rapid onset and a duration of pulpal anesthesia adequate to complete most dental and surgical procedures painlessly. For management of post-traumatic and postsurgical pain, bupivacaine-administered by an appropriate nerve block-near the conclusion of a surgical procedure, can provide the patient with a pain-free period of up to 12 h. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs represent the most effective drugs for the management of dental postsurgical pain. NSAIDs, as a group in therapeutic doses, have numbers needed to treat (NNTs) ranging from 2 to 3, while opioid analgesics do not approach those for NSAIDs. A protocol for management of pain following surgical procedures and traumatic injuries is discussed in this paper and includes preemptive NSAID; perioperative pain management; postoperative pain management-local anesthesia; postoperative pain management-analgesics; postoperative telephone call.

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