Title: Sedation in the Office: Challenges for Pediatric Dentistry
1Sedation in the Office Challenges for
Pediatric Dentistry
- Stephen Wilson DMD, MA, PhD
- Professor Chief of Dentistry
- University of Colorado
- School of Dentistry
- and
- The Childrens Hospital
2Pharmacological Issues Facing Pediatric Dentistry
Today
- The risks for the children involved with
pharmacological management compared to routine
communicative techniques, - Past safety record of pharmacological management,
- Parental expectations and societal changes,
- Nature of the childs cognitive and emotional
needs and personality, and - Extent of dental needs of the patient,
- Monitoring,
- Practitioner training and experience including
the ability to rescue a child when
significantly compromised, - Cost and third-party payors,
- Venue issues (i.e., Office vs. Out-patient care
facility)
3Risks Pharmacological vs. Behavioral Management
- Pharmacological (sedation, general anesthesia)
- Most significant adverse outcome death
- No direct data to support an estimated ratio of
risk/benefit prior to and following published
guidelines on sedation. - Fairly good estimate of number of
deaths/morbidities in dentistry (invariably and
indiscriminately lumping dental generalists and
specialties together confounding interpretation),
but no definitive data on the number of sedations
actually attempted. Also, no summary data on how
closely clinician followed guidelines. - For pediatric dentistry, the number of sedations
actually attempted in an outpatient setting may
approximate 100,000 - 200,000 per year based on
survey data. In extrapolating, it is estimated
that over 1.5 million children have been sedated
since 1985 when the first sedation guidelines
appeared. - Behavioral (TSD, voice control, papoose board,
distraction, coaxing) - Significant outcomes bone fracture/dislocation
of limbs injury to face from bur - No data, but there are anecdotal reports..
Houpt, M. (1989). "Report of project USAP the
use of sedative agents in pediatric dentistry."
ASDC J Dent Child 56(4) 302-9. Houpt, M. I.
(1993). "Project USAP--Part III Practice by
heavy users of sedation in pediatric dentistry."
ASDC J Dent Child 60(3) 183-5 Houpt, M.
(2002). "Project USAP 2000--use of sedative
agents by pediatric dentists a 15-year follow-up
survey." Pediatr Dent 24(4) 289-94.
4Dental Needs Of Children
- Dental caries is THE most frequent chronic
childhood disease according to the US Surgeon
General - it is especially prominent in the underserved
population (25 own 80 of caries problem) - 4 times more prominent than asthma
- Program directors perceive that the number of
new, recall and emergency patients and the number
of pre-school aged children and children with
special health care needs had increased in their
programs over the last 5 years. - Payment by Medicaid was the most common insurance
for children cared for in these settings. - The mean waiting time for scheduling treatment
with GA for a child in pain is 28 days without
pain 71 days. The mean waiting time for
scheduling treatment with sedation is 36 days.
- (2000). "Oral Health in America A Report of
the Surgeon General." U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, National Institute of Dental
and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of
Health.
Lewis, C. W. and A. J. Nowak (2002).
"Stretching the safety net too far waiting times
for dental treatment." Pediatr Dent 24(1) 6-10.
5Articles on Morbidity and Mortality Related to
Dentistry
6Practitioner Training
- Current accreditation standard indicates that
- a minimum of 1 month of anesthesia experience is
required (oral and maxillofacial surgery
standards require a minimum of 4 months) - CPR required (and many programs require PALS or
ACLS) and - sedation experiences (number, routes, types not
specified). - Overwhelmingly, sedation in training programs
involve oral and rarely, intravenous sedation.
Probably no other specialty has as much clinical
experience in oral sedation than pediatric
dentistry. - Today, most state boards of dentistry require a
sedation permit (facilities site visit, PALS or
ACLS certification, sedation training). - Currently, AAPD leadership is pursuing
standardization of training to include
standardized didactics and clinical sedation
experiences amongst all accredited pediatric
dentistry programs one of the principles
involved would be incorporation of rescue
training.
7Parental Expectations and Societal Changes
- How I was trained (almost 25 years ago)
- No parent allowed in operatory unless child is lt
3 years of age - Hand-Over-Mouth (HOM) w/wo airway restriction
(99 successful and took lt 30 seconds to
accomplish at no financial obligation and no
documented adverse effects BUT was abused and a
priori consent not obtained) - 25-75 GA cases/year _at_ 100 sedations
- Todays world Board-certified pediatric
dentists - A majority perceived parenting styles had changed
for the worse during their practice lifetime - 92 felt changes were "probably or definitely
bad - 85 felt that these changes had resulted in
"somewhat or much worse" child patient behavior - More crying struggling
- Less cooperative
- Parents are primary cause because they fail to
set limits on their childrens activities - Practitioners report performing less assertive
behavior management techniques than in the past
due to these changes.
Casamassimo, P. S., Wilson S., Gross, Ll.
(2002). "Effects of changing U.S. parenting
styles on dental practice perceptions of
diplomates of the American Board of Pediatric
Dentistry presented to the College of Diplomates
of the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry 16th
Annual Session, Atlanta, Ga, Saturday, May 26,
2001." Pediatr Dent 24(1) 18-22.
8Office Accountability
- Most of dentistry is a cottage industry with
regulation by state dental practice act. Each
practitioner, once licensed, is responsible for
patient safety in his/her own practice. - Most states require practitioners who do
sedation to have a permit to do so. Usually this
requires a site visit from a consultant
responsible to the state dental board. The visit
usually involves examination of the facilities in
terms of meeting sedation guidelines,
practitioner training (i.e., PALS and
educational/clinical training), emergency
management protocol, and paperwork. Yet, there
is considerable variability among state dental
practice acts. - If emergency occurs, the practitioner must be
prepared to manage the patient until assistance
(EMS) arrives. This issue may be most important
challenge for our specialty for those who sedate
in the office.
9Sedation in Pediatric Dentistry
- Most regimens involve either a benzodiazepene
alone or a combination of agents. - Most popular benzo is midazolam given primarily
orally (0.5 1.0 mg/kg) - Common agents used in various combinations
include chloral hydrate, meperidine,
antihistamines, and benzos. -
10Common Drug Combinations
11Key Factors In Drug Selection Dose
- Child temperament personality
- Clinical assessment
- query parent(s)
- observation with parent
- observation with parent assistant
- Clinical classification
- easy
- slow to warm up
- difficult
- Type and duration of dental care
- ultra-short extraction of maxillary incisors
- short quadrant of dentistry
- long 2 or more quadrants of dentistry
12Scheme For Selecting Agents
13Current AAPD Sedation Guidelines
- 5 functional levels of sedation
- I - anxiolysis
- II - interactive
- III - non-interactive, arousable with
- mild/moderate stimuli
- IV - non-interactive, arousable with
- intense stimuli
- V - GA
14Responsiveness
15Personnel Monitoring Equipment
16(No Transcript)
17Number of Publications in Pediatric Dentistry
Involving Sedation, Dentistry and Pediatric
- Topic (related) Number of Pubs
- Chloral hydrate 29
- Midazolam 21
- Meperidine 17
- Diazepam 7
- Triazolam 1
- Morphine 1
-
- Monitoring 20
- Blood Pressure 6
- Pulse Ox 6
- Capnography 7
18Research Needs
- Systematic, prospective studies investigating
patient personality, drug selection/dosage,
duration and type of care delivered. - Relationship among peri-operative factors and
patient safety including fasting, drug dose, and
recovery. - Cost analysis of sedation in terms of supplies,
personnel, risk/benefit. - Educational settings, training standards, and
outcomes assessment related to patient safety and
professional responsibility. - Investigation and implementation of repository
of cases categorized in terms of protocol
variables and outcomes of sedation cases.
19Educational Needs
- Standardized training possibly involving
regional centers of educational excellence. - Multidisciplinary exchange of information aimed
at educating professionals outside of ones
discipline/specialty that will benefit patient
care and minimize misunderstanding.
20Questions???