Section 17 Dental
17.1 Dental emergencies
Anatomy
The tooth consists of the crown, which is exposed, and the root, which lies within the socket covered by the gum and serves to anchor the tooth. The gingival pulp carries the neurovascular structures via the root canal and is covered by dentine, which in turn is covered by enamel, the hardest substance in the body (Fig. 17.1.1).
Dental caries
The most common cause of toothache or odontalgia is caries. Dental caries-related emergencies account for up to 52% of first contact with a dentist for children below the age of 3 years.1 Dental caries is the cause of emergency visits to a dentist in 73% of paediatric patients.2 Pain associated with dental caries is of a dull, throbbing nature, localized to a specific area and aggravated by changes in temperature in the oral cavity (hypersensitivity to hot and cold food or fluids).
Periodontal emergencies
Pain is the most common cause of self-referral to the emergency department for dental problems. The common conditions causing dental pain are acute apical periodontitis and reversible and irreversible pulpitis resulting from dental caries.3 Symptoms include painful swollen gums with or without halitosis. On occasions frank pus or bleeding from the gums may be the presenting symptom. At all stages varying degrees of pain associated with inflammation are invariably present.4
Management includes diagnosis of the periodontal disease and the offending tooth. Symptomatic pain relief can be achieved with analgesics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents and warm saline rinses. Routine antibiotic therapy is not required unless there is evidence of gross infection locally, regional lymphadenopathy or fever. In all cases urgent review by the dentist is mandatory.
Alveolar osteitis (dry socket)
Treatment consists of irrigation of the extraction site to remove the necrotic material and packing the socket with sterile gauze soaked in local anaesthetic such as cophenylcaine, followed by urgent dental review.5
Traumatic dental emergencies
Tooth avulsion is probably the most serious tooth injury. An avulsed tooth, if reimplanted in the socket within 30 min, has a 90% survival rate.6 The mechanism of injury in such cases is usually either accidental sports-related facial injuries or assault.
Management
If the patient makes telephone contact with the emergency department the patient is advised to locate the tooth because, even if the crown is broken, the root may be intact. The tooth should not be handled by the root to avoid damage to the periodontal ligament fibres; it is washed in running cold water and replaced in the socket. If this is not possible, place the tooth in the cheek or under the tongue and proceed immediately to the dentist. Do not scrub the tooth.7,8