Acute dental pain II: pulpal and peripical pain

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Acute dental pain II : pulpal and peripical pain. / Jonasson, Peter; Kirkevang, Lise-Lotte; Rosen, Annika; Bjørndal, Lars.

I: Tandlaegebladet, Bind 120, Nr. 2, 111, 2016, s. 120-127.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jonasson, P, Kirkevang, L-L, Rosen, A & Bjørndal, L 2016, 'Acute dental pain II: pulpal and peripical pain', Tandlaegebladet, bind 120, nr. 2, 111, s. 120-127. <http://www.tandlaegebladet.dk/sites/default/files/articles-pdf/TB22016-120.pdf>

APA

Jonasson, P., Kirkevang, L-L., Rosen, A., & Bjørndal, L. (2016). Acute dental pain II: pulpal and peripical pain. Tandlaegebladet, 120(2), 120-127. [111]. http://www.tandlaegebladet.dk/sites/default/files/articles-pdf/TB22016-120.pdf

Vancouver

Jonasson P, Kirkevang L-L, Rosen A, Bjørndal L. Acute dental pain II: pulpal and peripical pain. Tandlaegebladet. 2016;120(2):120-127. 111.

Author

Jonasson, Peter ; Kirkevang, Lise-Lotte ; Rosen, Annika ; Bjørndal, Lars. / Acute dental pain II : pulpal and peripical pain. I: Tandlaegebladet. 2016 ; Bind 120, Nr. 2. s. 120-127.

Bibtex

@article{489014c0d39b40cfaa0445cc7d861b4f,
title = "Acute dental pain II: pulpal and peripical pain",
abstract = "Acute dental pain most often occurs in relation to inflammatory conditions in the dental pulp or in the periradicular tissues surrounding a tooth, but it is not always easy to reach a diagnose and determine what treatment to perform. Theanamnesis and the clinical examination provide valuable information, and a systematic approach is necessary. This paper will focus on diagnosis and treatment of pulpitis, pulp necrosis and apical periodontitis, periodontal abscess and endodontic-periodontal lesions, pericoronitis and post-operative problems.When the patient seeks the dentist suffering from acute dental pain, they expect that the dentist starts treatment at once and that the treatment should provide pain relief. In this situation many patients are fragile, anxious and nervous. If the dentist is able to manage emergency treatment of acute dental pain thiswill build confidence and trust between patient and dentist. However, often the dentist does not have sufficient time to carry out more timeconsumingprocedures. This paper provides a guide for rational emergency treatments. Itdescribes how or whether the entire treatment or a less time-consuming pain relieving procedure should be carried out. The administration of local anaesthesia, the role of antibiotics and analgesics is discussed.",
author = "Peter Jonasson and Lise-Lotte Kirkevang and Annika Rosen and Lars Bj{\o}rndal",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
volume = "120",
pages = "120--127",
journal = "Tandlaegebladet",
issn = "0039-9353",
publisher = "Dansk Tandlaegeforening",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acute dental pain II

T2 - pulpal and peripical pain

AU - Jonasson, Peter

AU - Kirkevang, Lise-Lotte

AU - Rosen, Annika

AU - Bjørndal, Lars

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Acute dental pain most often occurs in relation to inflammatory conditions in the dental pulp or in the periradicular tissues surrounding a tooth, but it is not always easy to reach a diagnose and determine what treatment to perform. Theanamnesis and the clinical examination provide valuable information, and a systematic approach is necessary. This paper will focus on diagnosis and treatment of pulpitis, pulp necrosis and apical periodontitis, periodontal abscess and endodontic-periodontal lesions, pericoronitis and post-operative problems.When the patient seeks the dentist suffering from acute dental pain, they expect that the dentist starts treatment at once and that the treatment should provide pain relief. In this situation many patients are fragile, anxious and nervous. If the dentist is able to manage emergency treatment of acute dental pain thiswill build confidence and trust between patient and dentist. However, often the dentist does not have sufficient time to carry out more timeconsumingprocedures. This paper provides a guide for rational emergency treatments. Itdescribes how or whether the entire treatment or a less time-consuming pain relieving procedure should be carried out. The administration of local anaesthesia, the role of antibiotics and analgesics is discussed.

AB - Acute dental pain most often occurs in relation to inflammatory conditions in the dental pulp or in the periradicular tissues surrounding a tooth, but it is not always easy to reach a diagnose and determine what treatment to perform. Theanamnesis and the clinical examination provide valuable information, and a systematic approach is necessary. This paper will focus on diagnosis and treatment of pulpitis, pulp necrosis and apical periodontitis, periodontal abscess and endodontic-periodontal lesions, pericoronitis and post-operative problems.When the patient seeks the dentist suffering from acute dental pain, they expect that the dentist starts treatment at once and that the treatment should provide pain relief. In this situation many patients are fragile, anxious and nervous. If the dentist is able to manage emergency treatment of acute dental pain thiswill build confidence and trust between patient and dentist. However, often the dentist does not have sufficient time to carry out more timeconsumingprocedures. This paper provides a guide for rational emergency treatments. Itdescribes how or whether the entire treatment or a less time-consuming pain relieving procedure should be carried out. The administration of local anaesthesia, the role of antibiotics and analgesics is discussed.

M3 - Review

VL - 120

SP - 120

EP - 127

JO - Tandlaegebladet

JF - Tandlaegebladet

SN - 0039-9353

IS - 2

M1 - 111

ER -

ID: 172641703