Office-Based Anesthesia: Safety and Outcomes in Pediatric Dental Patients

Author:

Spera Allison L.1,Saxen Mark A.2,Yepes Juan F.3,Jones James E.4,Sanders Brian J.5

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Dental Resident, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Riley Hospital for Children/Indiana University School of Dentistry, Indianapolis, Indiana

2. Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Oral Pathology, Medicine and Radiology, Indiana University School of Dentistry, Indianapolis, Indiana

3. Associate Professor of Pediatric Dentistry, Riley Hospital for Children/Indiana University School of Dentistry, Indianapolis, Indiana

4. Starkey Research Professor and Chair, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Riley Hospital for Children/Indiana University School of Dentistry, Adjunct Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana

5. Program Director and Professor, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Riley Hospital for Children/Indiana University School of Dentistry, Indianapolis, Indiana

Abstract

The number of children with caries requiring general anesthesia to achieve comprehensive dental care and the demand for dentist anesthesiologists to provide ambulatory anesthesia for these patients is increasing. No current published studies examine the safety and outcomes of ambulatory anesthesia performed by dentist anesthesiologists for dental procedures in pediatric patients, and there is no national requirement for reporting outcomes of these procedures. In 2010, the Society for Ambulatory Anesthesia Clinical Outcomes Registry was developed. This Web-based database allows providers of ambulatory anesthesia to track patient demographics and various outcomes of procedures. Our study is a secondary analysis of data collected in the registry over a 4-year period, 2010–2014. Of the 7041 cases reviewed, no cases resulted in serious complications, including death, anaphylaxis, aspiration, cardiovascular adverse events, or neurologic adverse events. Of the 7041 cases reviewed, 196 (3.0%) resulted in a predischarge or postdischarge adverse event. The predischarge adverse event occurring with the highest frequency was laryngospasm, occurring in 35 cases (0.50%). The postdischarge adverse event occurring with the highest frequency was nausea, reported by 99 patients (5.0%). This study provides strong clinical outcomes data to support the safety of office-based anesthesia as performed by dentist anesthesiologists in the treatment of pediatric dental patients.

Publisher

American Dental Society of Anesthesiology (ADSA)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference38 articles.

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1. Authors’ Response;The Journal of the American Dental Association;2024-01

2. Letters;The Journal of the American Dental Association;2024-01

3. Silver Diamine Fluoride Renaissance in Paediatric Dentistry: A 24-Month Retrospective and Cross-Sectional Analysis;Medicina;2023-12-21

4. Management of Anaphylaxis in Dental Practice;Anesthesia Progress;2023-06-01

5. Deep Sedation for Dental Care Management in Healthy and Special Health Care Needs Children: A Retrospective Study;International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health;2023-02-15

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