Affiliation:
1. School of Dental Sciences Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK
2. Department of Dentistry and Oral Health Aarhus University Aarhus C Denmark
3. Department of Public Health Aarhus University Aarhus C Denmark
4. School of Pharmacy Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK
Abstract
AbstractAimTo investigate patient outcomes from either pulpotomy or pulpectomy for the management of symptomatic irreversible pulpitis, with and without application of antibiotic/corticosteroid pastes in urgent primary dental care settings in the United Kingdom.MethodologyAll patients receiving intervention for symptomatic irreversible pulpitis in three different primary care settings were invited to participate. Pre‐operatively, data regarding patients' numerical ratings scale (NRS), pain score (0–10), analgesic use, oral‐health impact profile‐14 (OHIP‐14) and need for time away from work were collected. For 7 days post‐operatively, participants recorded their NRS pain score, global rating of change score, medication use and their ability to work. Analysis used a mixed‐effects model with post hoc Tukey's multiple comparisons test for continuous data and chi‐squared or Fisher's exact test for categorical data. To test the effect of the corticosteroid/antibiotic paste, pulpectomy and pulpotomy groups were combined following Mantel–Haenszel stratified analysis or a weighted average of the difference between pulpotomy and pulpectomy with and without the use of corticosteroid/antibiotic paste. A binary composite score was constructed using pre‐ and post‐operative data, whereby overall treatment success was defined as: (i) patients did not return for treatment due to pain by day seven; (ii) at day three, there was a 33% (or 2‐points) reduction in NRS pain score; (iii) there was a change score of +3 in global rating; (iv) the patient was no longer using analgesia and able to return to work.ResultsEighty‐five participants were recruited, with 83 completing follow up. Overall treatment success was 57%, with 25% of participants returning for more treatment due to inadequate pain relief. Overall treatment success did not differ between the two groups (p = .645), although patients self‐reported greater improvement with an antibiotic/corticosteroid dressing for global rating of change (p = .015).ConclusionsThis study identified limited evidence of improved outcomes using antibiotic/corticosteroid dressings in the management of symptomatic irreversible pulpitis in the emergency setting. Further clinical research is needed to understand if these medications are beneficial in affording pain relief, above that of simple excision of irreversibly inflamed pulp tissue.