Complications after a dental procedure include swelling and pain, dry socket, osteomyelitis, bleeding, and osteonecrosis of the jaw.
Swelling and pain
Swelling is common after certain dental procedures, particularly tooth removal (extraction) and periodontal surgery.
Holding an ice pack—or better yet, a plastic bag of frozen peas or corn (which adapts to the shape of the face)—to the cheek can prevent much of the swelling.
Ice therapy can be used for the first 18 hours. Cold should be held on the cheek for 25-minute periods and then removed for 5-minute periods. If swelling persists or increases after 3 days or if pain is severe, an infection may have developed, and the person should contact the dentist.
Pain after a dental procedure can be moderate to severe. People can take various pain relievers.
► Lea también: ORAL SURGERY : Complications After Tooth Extraction
Dry socket (alveolitis)
A dry socket (exposure of the bone in the socket, causing delayed healing) may develop after a lower back tooth has been extracted and the normal blood clot in the socket is lost.
Typically, discomfort lessens for 2 or 3 days after the extraction and then suddenly worsens, sometimes accompanied by an earache. Although the condition goes away by itself after 1 to 2 weeks, a dentist can place a dressing soaked with an anesthetic in the socket to eliminate the pain. The dentist replaces the dressing every 1 to 3 days until no more pain is felt after the gauze has been left out for a few hours.
Dry sockets are much more common among smokers. If at all possible, smokers should not smoke for several days before and after the extraction is done. Women (especially those taking oral contraceptives) also have a high rate of developing dry socket.
Osteomyelitis
Osteomyelitis is an infection of the bone and is usually caused by bacteria. When osteomyelitis occurs in the mouth, it typically occurs as an infection of the lower jaw.
People usually have a fever, and the affected area is tender and swollen. Doctors or dentists use an x-ray to make the diagnosis. People with osteomyelitis need to take antibiotics for an extended period of time.
Bleeding
Bleeding after a tooth is removed is common. Bleeding in the mouth may appear worse than it is because a small amount of blood may mix with saliva and appear to be more blood than is actually present.
Usually, the bleeding can be stopped by keeping steady pressure on the surgical site for the first hour, normally by having the person bite down on a piece of gauze.
People may have to repeat the process 2 or 3 times. Keeping the gauze (or a tea bag) steadily in place for at least an hour is important. Most problems with bleeding occur because the person frequently removes the pack to see whether the bleeding has stopped.
If bleeding continues for more than a few hours, the dentist should be notified. The dentist may need to clean out the bleeding area and surgically close it with stitches (sutures).
People who regularly take an anticoagulant (a drug that prevents clots) such as warfarin or aspirin (even if they take only one aspirin every few days) should mention it to the dentist a week before surgery because these drugs increase the tendency to bleed.
The dentist and the person’s doctor may adjust the drug dosage or temporarily stop the drug a few days before surgery.
Osteonecrosis of the jaw
Osteonecrosis of the jaw is a disorder that involves exposure of the jaw bone through the gum tissue. The disorder usually causes pain, loosening of teeth, and a discharge of pus. The disorder may occur after
°Tooth extraction
°An injury
°Radiation therapy to the head and neck (osteoradionecrosis)
Osteonecrosis of the jaw may occur spontaneously. This disorder develops in some people who were given drugs that strengthen bone (often used to treat osteoporosis).
The most common of these drugs are bisphosphonates, such as alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, and zoledronate. Bisphosphonates seem to have a higher risk of causing osteonecrosis of the jaw in people who undergo oral surgery of the lower jaw while taking intravenous bisphosphonates, who have previously been given high doses of bisphosphonates by vein (common with certain cancer treatments), or who have been taking bisphosphonates for a long period of time.
The risk of developing osteonecrosis of the jaw is much lower (about 1 in 1,000) in people who are given bisphosphonates in standard doses for osteoporosis.
Treatment typically involves scraping away some of the damaged bone (debridement), taking antibiotics by mouth, and using antibacterial mouth rinses.
Fuente: msdmanuals.com
MSD Manual Consumer Version
David F. Murchison
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