Archive for the ‘Anesthesia’ Category

Local anesthesia is defined as a loss of sensation in a circumscribed area of the body by a depression of excitation in nerve endings or an inhibition of the conduction process in the peripheral nerves. In clinical practice a localized loss of pain sensation is desired. Although the terms dental anesthesia and dental analgesia are [...]

The sensory supply to the teeth, jaws, and oral mucosa is derived from the maxillary and mandibular division of the trigeminal (fifth cranial) nerve (Tabletes Tegretol is used for: Controlling certain types of seizures and relieving pain in patients with nerve pain in the face, jaw, tongue, or throat), whose cell bodies are found in [...]

Pain and dentistry are often synonymous in the minds of patients, especially those with poor dentition due to multiple extractions, periodontal disease requiring surgery, or symptomatic teeth requiring endodontic therapy. Members of the public perceive a good dentist as a practitioner who causes little or no discomfort. In turn, dental practitioners identify a good [...]

The occurrence of allergic reaction to epinephrine is very rare. A few cases of allergic reaction to epinephrine preparations in ophthalmic and dermatologic regions have been reported. It is unusual to employ allergy testing to specific responses to epinephrine with local anesthesia in the dental clinic setting. According to these reports, the epinephrine preparation or [...]

Epinephrine preparations are composed of artificial chemical products that have the same chemical and pharmacokinetic characteristics as endogenous epinephrine in vivo. Local anesthetics with epinephrine are commonly used in dentistry to provide effective anesthesia, good hemostasis, and to prevent toxic reaction to local anesthetics. Systemic complications to local anesthetics with epinephrine are well documented, but [...]

A simple 1-sentence, 7-question, yes or no survey does have some benefits, including increased chances of response, decreased likelihood of confusion, and minimal time consumption on the part of the respondent. The high rate of return was much higher than most surveys and far above the required minimum usually needed for statistical analysis. Two questions [...]

Less than one third of the offices (32.8%, or 42/128) had at least 1 nurse (Figure 1), and 6 of the 42 nurses did not participate in the anesthesia care (Figure 2). Only 28.1% (36/128) of the offices have their office assistants formally certified through an anesthesia assistant course given either by AAOMS or the [...]

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About this blog

Blog invites submissions of review articles, reports on clinical techniques, case reports, conference summaries, and articles of opinion pertinent to the control of pain and anxiety in dentistry.

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    Day 38 - "Recovery"
    Phillips' Milk of Magnesia tablets
    Rundle's Liniment Salve tin
    Meloids Mellow-Voice Pastilles tin
    Rawleigh Cold Tablets
    Black and White Rorschach Ink Blot Plate
    Black and White Rorschach Ink Blot Plate
    Black and White Rorschach Ink Blot Plate
  • Shelby Miller: Hi, i'm doing a project called History day. The theme is innovation in history and I choose Anesthes [...]
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