52 research outputs found
Relationship between preoperative anxiety and postoperative satisfaction in dental implant surgery with intravenous conscious sedation
Purpose: To study if patient preoperative anxiety is related to age and gender and to compare preoperative anxiety with postoperative patient and surgeon satisfaction in dental implant surgery under intravenous conscious sedation. Materials and Methods: Dental implants were placed in 102 patients under local anesthesia and intravenous conscious sedation. The procedures were performed with or without dental extractions, and with or without bone regeneration. Anxiety was evaluated using Corah?s Dental Anxiety Scale and levels of surgeon and patient satisfaction were evaluated on an adapted scale. Results: Low preoperative anxiety was observed in 27.8% of patients, moderate in 50%, and high in 22.2%. Mean value of anxiety was 9.8+/-3.7. The level of surgeon satisfaction was adequate in 87.8% of the surgeries; patients were awake and nervous in 4.4% of surgeries, and excessively sleepy, with little cooperation in 7.8% of surgeries. Regarding patient satisfaction, the procedure was comfortable for 23.3% of patients, neither comfortable nor uncomfortable for 28.9%, a slightly uncomfortable experience for 36.7%, and very uncomfortable for 10% of patients. Younger patients and women were observed to have more anxiety, the difference being statistically significant. Patients with higher preoperative anxiety expressed a lower level of satisfaction, with statistically significant differences. There was no significant relationship between preoperative patient anxiety and postoperative surgeon satisfaction. Conclusion: Anxiety was higher in younger patients and women. In this study, a higher preoperative patient anxiety was associated with lower patient satisfaction, but had no influence on postoperative surgeon satisfaction
Hemodynamic and ventilatory changes during implant surgery with intravenous conscious sedation
Purpose: This study was conducted to determine the hemodynamic and ventilatory changes during implant surgery with intravenous conscious sedation, and whether preoperative anxiety, gender or age influence these parameters. Patients and Methods: A prospective study carried out between May 2004 and February 2007, on 102 patients treated with dental implants under local anesthesia and conscious intravenous sedation. Patients completed a questionnaire prior to surgery to evaluate preoperative dental anxiety using Corah's scale. The hemodynamic and ventilatory changes were evaluated by monitoring systolic pressure (SP), diastolic pressure (DP), heart rate (HR) and oxygen saturation (SaO2). These values were collected at 5 points during surgery; before commencing the operation (baseline value), during local anesthetic injection, at the moment of incision and raising of a mucoperiosteal flap, during implant placement, and finally at suturing. Intravenous conscious sedation was administered between baseline value and injection of the local anesthetic. Results: The highest SP and DP were recorded at baseline and at suturing. The highest HR was recorded at the moment of incision and raising of the mucoperiosteal flap; the lowest SaO2 was recorded at local anesthetic injection. There was no relationship between hemodynamic and ventilatory values and preoperative anxiety or gender. A greater age was associated with higher SP and lower SaO2, these differences being statistically significant. Conclusions: Most of the cardiovascular and ventilatory changes induced by the implant surgery with intravenous conscious sedation were within normal ranges. The results indicate that midazolam with fentanyl do not produce important hemodynamic and ventilatory changes, being a good association for intravenous conscious sedation in dental implant surgery. © Medicina Oral S. L
Bone necrosis around dental implants: a patient treated with oral bisphosphonates, drug holiday and no risk according to serum CTX
Osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) may appear following certain oral surgery procedures in patients treated with oral
bisphosphonates (OB). Guidelines for the treatment of these patients were set out in the American Association
of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (AAOMS) Position Paper on Bisphosphonate-Related Osteonecrosis of The
Jaws (Position Paper) and Approved by the Board of Trustees in September 2006. For the AAOMS the placement
of implants in these patients is not contraindicated. In addition, the serum C-terminal telopeptide bone suppressor
marker (CTX) test is available to determine the risk of ONJ. A case is presented of ONJ in a patient with 6 months
of OB discontinuation ('drug holiday') before dental implant placement (following the guidelines of the AAOMS)
and with no risk of osteonecrosis according to the serum CTX value (340 pg/ml). The wound healed favorably with
complete healing at 7 months. In this case, the serum CTX test must be questioned as to its predictive value of ONJ,
and more reliable markers of this risk are needed
Study of serum ctx in 50 oral surgical patients treated with oral bisphosphonates
Objectives: To determine whether there is a relationship between the total BP dose administered and the variations in serum CTX concentration. Study design: The study included 50 patients requiring dental implant surgery and treated with oral BPs, seen in an Oral Surgery and Implantology Unit between January 2007 and June 2009. The patients were divided into two groups: those in which the medication was not suspended before obtaining the laboratory test sample, and those patients referred from other dental clinics in which BPs was suspended before reporting to our Unit. The total drug dosage administered and the total dose per kilogram body weight were evaluated for comparison with serum CTX. The data obtained were correlated to the osteonecrosis risk table developed by Marx et al. in 2007. Results: There were no significant differences between the two groups in relation to the total administered dose and the dose in mg/kg b.w. Likewise, in both groups no relationship was observed between the serum CTX value and the total administered dose or the dose in mg/kg b.w. No differences were found between the two patient groups regarding chemical osteonecrosis risk based on the criteria of Marx et al. Conclusions: No relationship was observed between the oral BP dose administered (total dose or expressed in mg/kg b.w.) and serum CTX concentration, and suspension of the medication did not influence the serum CTX levels
Back to the Grindstone? The Archaeological Potential of Grinding-Stone Studies in Africa with Reference to Contemporary Grinding Practices in Marakwet, Northwest Kenya
This article presents observations on grinding-stone implements and their uses in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, northwest Kenya. Tool use in Marakwet is contextualized with a select overview of literature on grinding-stones in Africa. Grinding-stones in Marakwet are incorporated not only into quotidian but also into more performative and ritual aspects of life. These tools have distinct local traditions laden with social as well as functional importance. It is argued that regionally and temporally specific studies of grinding-stone tool assemblages can be informative on the processing of various substances. Despite being common occurrences, grinding-stone tools are an under-discussed component of many African archaeological assemblages. Yet the significance of grinding-stones must be reevaluated, as they hold the potential to inform on landscapes of past food and material processing
Wet oxidation via two-phase flow reactors and high mass-transfer regimes
This paper describes an approach based in the creation of a high interfacial area flow regime via
a jet mixer. The latter is a device that permits the dispersion of the liquid phase into fine droplets.
The establishment of a mist-type two-phase flow leads, in a few minutes, to rapid oxidation of the
organic compounds in a kinetically controlled regime. A compact oxidation technology based on
jet mixers and tubular reactors is thus achieved. The results obtained with prototype phenolic and
glycol solutions and, also, with industrial wastewaters are discussed.Peer Reviewe
Wet oxidation via two-phase flow reactors and high mass-transfer regimes
This paper describes an approach based in the creation of a high interfacial area flow regime via
a jet mixer. The latter is a device that permits the dispersion of the liquid phase into fine droplets.
The establishment of a mist-type two-phase flow leads, in a few minutes, to rapid oxidation of the
organic compounds in a kinetically controlled regime. A compact oxidation technology based on
jet mixers and tubular reactors is thus achieved. The results obtained with prototype phenolic and
glycol solutions and, also, with industrial wastewaters are discussed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Wet oxidation via two-phase flow reactors and high mass-transfer regimes
This paper describes an approach based in the creation of a high interfacial area flow regime via
a jet mixer. The latter is a device that permits the dispersion of the liquid phase into fine droplets.
The establishment of a mist-type two-phase flow leads, in a few minutes, to rapid oxidation of the
organic compounds in a kinetically controlled regime. A compact oxidation technology based on
jet mixers and tubular reactors is thus achieved. The results obtained with prototype phenolic and
glycol solutions and, also, with industrial wastewaters are discussed.Peer Reviewe
The relation of preoperative stress and anxiety on patients' satisfaction after implant placement
Background: There are some factors which can affect preoperative patient anxiety such as the necessity of procedure, postoperative pain, and patient's conception of his body image. The aim of this study was to assess the relation of patients' preoperative anxiety and postoperative patients' satisfaction in dental implant surgery.
Materials and Methods: Dental implants were placed in 40 patients (19 male and 21 female) who were referred to Dental Implant Surgery Department in Imam Reza clinic, during March–December of 2014 in Shiraz. The procedures were performed with or without bone regeneration. Preoperative anxiety was evaluated using Corah Dental Anxiety Scale, and postoperative satisfaction was determined on the basis of pain intensity, bleeding tendency, inability to eating, and overall satisfaction by filling a questionnaire in the 2nd or 3rd week after surgery. Data were collected and analyzed using Mann-Whitney test.
Results: Preoperative anxiety was detected as high in 10%, mild in 85%, and moderate in 5% of patients. Anxiety and depression score did not differ in both genders. There was no statistical difference between neither level of anxiety nor depression in both high and low educated patients. Postoperative bleeding, difficulty in eating, and overall satisfaction was nearly the same in both genders. Statistical analysis demonstrated a lower pain level and higher pain threshold in men than women (P = 0.007). Patients' age was not related to anxiety, depression, amount of bleeding, pain, and difficulty in eating. Overall dental care satisfaction was similar in both men and women.
Conclusion: The results of the study indicated that while anxiety does play a role in the perception of pain by patients undergoing implant surgery, overall patient satisfaction and post surgical outcomes did not significantly differ
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