zaterdag 19 november 2011

How Sedation Dentistry Assists Those With Dental Anxiety

By Richard Greene


A lot of Americans avoid the dentist because of a heavy fear of dental procedures. It is not well understood that poor dental care may increase the risk of stroke, heart disease, or diabetes. Over 3/4 of Americans have anxiety of the dentist.

This is where sedation dentistry provides an excellent option for patients with dental anxiety. Who should consider it? Any patient who is dealing with the following:

-A bad experience with a previous dentist

-Soreness of the jaw

-Trouble getting numb with local injections

-A gag reflex that is strong

-A reaction to a dental office physiologically that is negative

-A fear of needles

Another reason sedation can work well is if multiple surgeries are needed at one time it may obviate the need for numerous appointments. Executives do not like missing numerous work days to have their teeth dealt with. Dental sedation can allow for this to occur in one setting. Without sedation, working on both sides of the mouth is almost impossible. Patients will often bite their tongue if the work is only being done under local anesthesia. Along with this, several dentists before IV sedation would crush medication under the patient's tongue.

The issue with this is the patient at times would wake up during the surgery, and it got complicated because there was no IV to put medication into. The individual needed to be restrained with additional medication crushed under the tongue in order to get the patient back to sleep. It would take upwards of a half hour of waiting to work. The more modern way of doing it is to put in an IV and administer just enough medication to put the patient back to sleep and this can be elevated if the patient's medication wears off during the surgery.

Along with this if the person is embarrassed about the teeth's condition and wants to get the work done quicker, sedation dentistry allows this.

Quite a few individuals receive dental sedation for their surgeries and eventually wake up saying "when does the procedure start?" During a sedation dentistry surgery, people are closely monitored with their positioning and vitals. People at times end up with dry mouth or hiccups. The good news is most people have minimal if any memory of the procedure and it may actually reduce the procedure soreness due to the relaxation.

The truth is, patients may also have sedation dentistry for the first procedure and then when they come back for further ones do not have the anxiety anymore. That means they will not need to undergo sedation dentistry on future visits.




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