Safety of buccal infiltration local anaesthesia for dental procedures

Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia
Alison DougallBlanaid Daly

Abstract

To assess the safety of buccal infiltration local anaesthetic (LA) without additional factor replacement in patients with haemophilia (PWH) and association with clinical experience of the operator. A consecutive sample of participants with mild, moderate and severe haemophilia scheduled to have dental treatment were recruited from a comprehensive care centre in Ireland. Infiltration LA was administered using a standard technique. Safety was defined as any adverse event at time of administration, immediate postoperative, or postoperative period. Clinical experience was dichotomized into fewer or greater than three years clinical experience. N = 135 buccal infiltration LAs without additional factor replacement were provided to N = 71 participants with mild (n = 20; 28%) and moderate to severe haemophilia (n = 51; 72%). Successful local anaesthesia was achieved in n = 133 cases (99%). No (0%) adverse bleeding events were recorded for any participants at time of administration of LA or during follow-up. Three out of 135 (2.2%) LAs recorded superficial bleeding 30 seconds after administration of LA, all of which resolved within 2 minutes with application of pressure; 4 out of 135 (3%) LAs produced a superficial haematoma at the site...Continue Reading

References

Jun 28, 2003·Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia·J Wight, S Paisley
Aug 3, 2007·The Journal of the American Dental Association·Douglas RobertsonMelissa McCartney
Apr 26, 2008·Journal of Endodontics·Ian P CorbettJohn G Meechan
Jun 19, 2010·Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia·I HewsonM Walsh
Apr 9, 2011·British Dental Journal·K E YappP Parashos
Jul 6, 2011·Dental Clinics of North America·Orrett E Ogle, Ghazal Mahjoubi
Sep 9, 2011·The Journal of the American Dental Association·John G Meechan
Nov 29, 2011·Dental Clinics of North America·Orrett E Ogle, Ghazal Mahjoubi
Dec 14, 2011·Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia·H KalsiD P Hart
Jun 9, 2012·Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology·Paolo BoffanoCesare Gallesio
Jul 11, 2012·Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia·A SrivastavaUNKNOWN Treatment Guidelines Working Group on Behalf of The World Federation Of Hemophilia

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Jan 22, 2020·Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia·Branislav Bajkin, Alison Dougall
May 2, 2020·Special Care in Dentistry : Official Publication of the American Association of Hospital Dentists, the Academy of Dentistry for the Handicapped, and the American Society for Geriatric Dentistry·Hassan Abed, Jameel Abuljadayel
Oct 8, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Sylwia CzajkowskaAnna Surdacka
Jan 29, 2022·Primary Dental Journal·Ruixiang YeeJoyce Ching Mei Lam

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Blood Clotting Disorders

Thrombophilia includes conditions with increased tendency for excessive blood clotting. Blood clotting occurs when the body has insufficient amounts of specialized proteins that make blood clot and stop bleeding. Here is the latest research on blood clotting disorders.

Related Papers

Stomatologiia. Stomatology
A AnastasovD Filev
Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London
C B Kerr
Haemophilia : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia
I HewsonM Walsh
Scandinavian Journal of Haematology. Supplementum
F PanicucciA Sagripanti
© 2022 Meta ULC. All rights reserved