20 anesthesia and sedation. 2 anesthetics and sedation reduce pain relieve anxiety different levels...

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20

Anesthesia and Sedation

2

Anesthetics and Sedation

• Reduce pain

• Relieve anxiety

• Different levels of sedation can be achieved based upon procedural need and patient response

3

Conscious Sedation

• Causes an altered state of consciousness

• Patient can still communicate

• May experience headache, nausea, brief periods of amnesia

4

IV Sedation

• Administered directly into the bloodstream

• Patient may be conscious but in a deeply relaxed state

• Patient has no memory of events taking place while sedated

5

Oral Sedation

• Prescription taken before appointment

• May make the patient calm and drowsy or calm and relaxed

6

Inhalation Sedation

• Odorless and colorless gases

• Inhaled through mask

• Patient doesn’t remember much of procedure

7

Intramuscular Sedation

• Injection into muscle of upper arm or thigh

• Not commonly used

• Takes 20 to 30 minutes to take effect

8

General Anesthesia

• Creates an unconscious state

• Must be carefully controlled

• Sensation and feeling is lost

9

Topical Anesthesia

• Numbs a particular area

• Used prior to local anesthetic

• Desensitizes the oral mucosa

10

Local Anesthesia

• Produces a deadened or pain free area

• Sensory impulses are temporarily blocked

• Affects the nerve fibers carrying messages to brain

11

Topical Anesthetics

• Used for the following:– Subgingival scaling– Root planing– Seating crowns– Placing matrix bands– Periodontal probing– Preparation for local sedation – Repress gag reflex

12

Placing Topical Anesthetic

13

Local Anesthetics

• Used to manage pain

• Can be short, intermediate, or long in duration

• Vasoconstrictor

14

Possible Complications of Local Anesthetics

• Toxic reactions– Patient becomes ill– Many factors

• Paresthesia– Numbness does not go away as expected

15

Types of Injections

• Local infiltration– Injection near small terminal nerve

branches

• Field block– Injection near large terminal nerve

branches

• Nerve block– Injection near main trunk nerve

16

Maxillary Arch Injection Sites

17

Anesthetic Setup

18

Aspirating Syringe

19

Components of a Needle

20

Needle Care and Handling

• Maximum of four penetrations• Stick protection• Caps and shields• Proper disposal• OSHA guidelines• Sharps container• Procedure if stick occurs• OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens protocol

21

Anesthetic Cartridge Components

22

Retracting Harpoon

23

Loading Cartridge into Syringe

24

Engaging Harpoon

25

Placement of Needle into Syringe

26

Passing the Syringe

27

Disassembling the Syringe

28

Intraosseous Anesthesia

• Cancellous bone injected directly• Special equipment required• Anesthetizes the following:

– Bone– Soft tissue– Root– Teeth– Single or multiple teeth

29

Periodontal Ligament Injection

• Used for pulpal anesthesia of one or two teeth in a quadrant

• May be an adjunct to another injection where patient is partially anesthetized

• Aids in diagnosing abscessed teeth

30

Periodontal Ligament Injection System

31

Intrapulpal Injection• Delivered directly into nerve chamber

• Procedures– Root canal therapy – Severe abscess

32

Electronic Anesthesia

• Used with nitrous oxide provides a better effect

• Used in the following procedures:– Placing restorations– Muscle relaxation– Determination of centric occlusion

33

Computer-Controlled Local Anesthesia Delivery System

• Pain-free injections

• Used for all traditional infiltration and block injections

34

Nitrous Oxide• Safe, stable, non-flammable gas

• Relaxes and comforts the patient

35

Nitrous Oxide• Contradictions

– Blocked nasal passage– Emotional instability

• Drug users

– First trimester of pregnancy– Risk of bone marrow suppression– In-vitro fertilization procedures– Neurological complaints

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