Oral Med Flashcards
what is atypical odontalgia
pain without dental pathology
presents like acute pulpitis but pattern is that it comes and goes - pulpitis would get worse until nerve necrotic and then no pain
no disease present
caused by damage to pathway that supplies tooth - patient relates this to toothache
how is atypical odontalgia treated
referral to oral med
reassure patient that no dental disease so nothing to treat but that you believe them
analgesic advice in meantime
how can each cranial nerve be tested
1 - olfactory - can they smell
2, 3, 4, and 6 - visual acuity and eye movements
5 - trigeminal - test sensitivity at each branch
7 - facial - movement of facial muscles
8- vestibulococchlear - can patient hear
9 + 10 - can patient move uvula to side and say ah
11 - accessory - shrug shoulders
12 - hypoglossal - move tongue
what are symptoms of trigeminal neuralgia
intense sharp pain lasting 2-3 seconds, happening in cluster of attacks
happens along course of nerve, normally maxillary or mandibular
caused by vascular compression of the nerve or secondary to MS
what triggers trigeminal neuralgia
wind, cold, touch, chewing
normally mask like face to avoid bringing pain on
how is trigeminal neuralgia treated
carbamazepine first line - referral to oral med, needs careful monitoring due to effects on blood
what is chronic hyperplastic candidiasis
fungal infection of the mouth, normally white patches on cheeks
cannot be scraped off - deeper into tissue
has potential to become more sinister - need to take incisional biopsy - OM
how is chronic hyperplastic candidiasis treated
risk factors - rinse mouth after inhaler, check blood for diabetes and anaemia, immunocompromised
oral hygiene instruction
smoking cessation
systemic antifungal - fluconazole 50mg - 1 a day for 7 days - review after a week
explain lichen planus to a patient
it is a relatively common condition and is a type of allergic reaction - the body percieves something harmless as a threat and works to try to remove it. in doing so it makes more keratin - which is a protein in the body, on skin and nails and responsible for these white marks you can see in your mouth.
the cause of this is commonly a silver filling or medications. can happen after trauma - tissue healing itself
this has the potential to turn malignant, into something more sinister - around 1% in 10 years so it is important for us to keep this under observation and monitor for any changes - every 4-6 months
how is lichen planus treated
if asymptomatic - kuo
if symptomatic - treat symptoms, benzydamine mouthwash, chx mouthwash
check blood for haematinics
sls free toothpaste
if still persisting - topical steroids, beclomethasone mouthwash but referral to OM
if a patient is presenting with dry mouth, what is important to gain from history?
how much it is effecting patient - effecting eating, talking, uncomfortable
what medications is the patient on and what for - amitryptiline antidepressant and used for pain
does the patient smoke or drink alcohol
any other conditions - diabetes, anxiety, stroke, sjorgens
what advice should be given to a patient complaining of dry mouth
improve hydration - amitryptaline reduces fluid in body so need to increase fluid intake
improve diabetes control
manage symptoms - saliva replacements - lozenges, gel, sugar free chewing gum
high prevention - high strength toothpaste, oral hygiene instruction
if candida - CHX MW
why does facial palsy occur after giving IDB and how does this appear
injecting too far back - into parotid gland where facial nerve runs through - temporary paralysis of facial muscles
ipsilateral paralysis of facial muscles, including forehead, drooping of corner of mouth, unable to close eyelids
in stroke - forehead spared so able to wrinkle forehead