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The extent of the medical history, physical examination, and laboratory evaluation of patients requiring outpatient dentoalveolar surgery, under local anesthesia, nitrous oxide sedation, or both, differs substantially from that necessary for a patient requiring hospital admission and general anesthesia for surgical procedures. A patient's primary care physician typically performs periodic comprehensive history taking and physical examination of patients; it is therefore impractical and of little value for the dentist to duplicate this process. However, the dental professional must discover the presence or history of medical problems that may affect the safe delivery of the care she or he plans to provide, as well as any conditions specifically affecting the health of the oral and maxillofacial regions. This is particularly true for patients for which dentoalveolar surgery is planned. This is due to several factors such as the added physical stress surgery patient experience, the creation of a bleeding wound that then needs to heal, the invasive nature of surgery that typically introduces microorganisms into the patients tissues, and the common need for more elaborate pain and anxiety control measures and the use of more potent agents.
Dentists are educated in the basic biomedical sciences and the pathophysiology of common medical problems, particularly as they relate to the maxillofacial region. This special expertise in medical topics as they relate to the oral region makes dentists valuable resources on the community health care delivery team. The responsibility this carries is that dentists must be capable of recognizing and appropriately managing pathologic oral conditions. To maintain this expertise, a dentist must keep informed of new developments in medicine, be vigilant while treating patients, and be prepared to communicate a thorough but succinct evaluation of the oral health of patients to other health care providers.
An accurate medical history is the most useful information a clinician can have when deciding whether a patient can safely undergo planned dental therapy. The dentist must be prepared to anticipate how a medical problem or problems might alter a patient's response to planned anesthetic agents and surgery. If the history taking is done well, the physical examination and laboratory evaluation of a patient usually play lesser roles in the presurgical evaluation. The standard format used for recording the results of medical histories and physical examinations is illustrated in Box 1.1 . This general format tends to be followed even in electronic medical records.
Biographic data
Chief complaint and its history
Medical history
Social and family medical histories
Review of systems
Physical examination
Laboratory and imaging results
The medical history interview and the physical examination should be tailored to each patient, taking into consideration the patient's medical problems, age, intelligence, and social circumstances; the complexity of the planned procedure; and the anticipated anesthetic methods.
The first information to obtain from a patient is biographic data. These data include the patient's full name, home address, age, gender, and occupation, as well as the name of the patient's primary care physician. The clinician uses this information, along with an impression of the patient's intelligence and personality, to assess the patient's reliability. This is important because the validity of the medical history provided by the patient depends primarily on the reliability of the patient as a historian. If the identification data and patient interview give the clinician reason to suspect that the medical history may be unreliable, alternative methods of obtaining the necessary information should be tried. A reliability assessment should continue throughout the entire history interview and physical examination, with the interviewer looking for illogical, improbable, or inconsistent patient responses that might suggest the need for corroboration of information.
Every patient should be asked to state their chief complaint. This can be accomplished on a form the patient completes, or the patient's answers should be transcribed (preferably verbatim) into the dental record during the initial interview by a staff member or the dentist. This statement helps the clinician establish priorities during history taking and treatment planning. In addition, having patients formulate a chief complaint encourages them to clarify for themselves and the clinician why they desire treatment. Occasionally, a hidden agenda may exist for the patient, consciously or subconsciously. In such circumstances, subsequent information elicited from the patient interview may reveal the true reason the patient seeks care.
The patient should be asked to describe the history of the present complaint or illness, particularly its first appearance, any changes since its first appearance, and its influence on or by other factors. For example, descriptions of pain should include date of onset, intensity, duration, location, and radiation, as well as factors that worsen and mitigate the pain. In addition, an inquiry should be made about constitutional symptoms such as fever, chills, lethargy, anorexia, malaise, and any weakness associated with the chief complaint.
This portion of the health history may be straightforward, such as a 2-day history of pain and swelling around an erupting third molar. However, the chief complaint may be relatively involved, such as a lengthy history of a painful, nonhealing extraction site in a patient who received therapeutic irradiation. In this more complex case, a more detailed history of the chief complaint is important to obtain.
Most dental practitioners find health history forms (questionnaires) to be an efficient means of initially collecting the medical history, whether obtained in writing or in an electronic format. When a credible patient completes a health history form, the dentist can use pertinent answers to direct the interview. Properly trained dental assistants can “red flag” important patient responses on the form (e.g., circling allergies to medications in red or electronically flagging them) to bring positive answers to the dentist's attention.
Health questionnaires should be written clearly, in nontechnical language, and in a concise manner. To lessen the chance of patients giving incomplete or inaccurate responses, and to comply with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations, the form should include a statement that assures the patient of the confidentiality of the information and a consent line identifying those individuals the patient approves of having access to the dental record, such as the primary care physician and other clinicians in the practice. The form should also include a way (e.g., a signature line or pad) for the patient to verify that he or she has understood the questions and the accuracy of the answers. Numerous health questionnaires designed for dental patients are available from sources such as the American Dental Association and dental textbooks ( Fig. 1.1 ).
Answers to the items listed in Box 1.2 (collected on a form via touch screen or verbally) help establish a suitable health history database for patients; if the data are collected verbally, subsequent written documentation of the results is important.
Past hospitalizations, operations, traumatic injuries, and serious illnesses
Recent minor illnesses or symptoms
Medications currently or recently in use and allergies (particularly drug allergies)
Description of health-related habits or addictions, such as the use of ethanol, tobacco, and illicit drugs; and the amount and type of daily exercise
Date and result of last medical checkup or physician visit
In addition to this basic information, it is helpful to inquire specifically about common medical problems that are likely to alter the dental management of the patient. These problems include angina, myocardial infarction (MI), heart murmurs, rheumatic heart disease, bleeding disorders (including anticoagulant use), asthma, chronic lung disease, hepatitis, sexually transmitted infections, diabetes, corticosteroid use, seizure disorder, stroke, and any implanted prosthetic device such as artificial joint or heart valve. Patients should be asked specifically about allergies to local anesthetics, aspirin, and penicillin. Female patients in the appropriate age group must be asked at each visit whether they are or may be pregnant.
A brief family history can be useful and should focus on relevant inherited diseases such as hemophilia ( Box 1.3 ). The medical history should be regularly updated. Many dentists have their assistants specifically ask each patient at checkup appointments whether there has been any change in health since the last dental visit. The dentist is alerted if a change has occurred, and the changes are documented in the record.
Allergies to antibiotics or local anesthetics
Angina
Anticoagulant use
Asthma
Bleeding disorders
Breastfeeding
Corticosteroid use
Diabetes
Heart murmurs
Hepatitis
Hypertension
Implanted prosthetic devices
Lung disease
Myocardial infarction (i.e., heart attack)
Osteoporosis
Pregnancy
Renal disease
Rheumatic heart disease
Seizure disorder
Sexually transmitted diseases
Tuberculosis
The medical review of systems is a sequential, comprehensive method of eliciting patient symptoms on an organ-by-organ basis. The review of systems may reveal undiagnosed medical conditions. This review can be extensive when performed by a physician for a patient with complicated medical problems. However, the review of systems conducted by the dentist before oral surgery should be guided by pertinent answers obtained from the history. For example, the review of the cardiovascular system in a patient with a history of ischemic heart disease includes questions concerning chest discomfort (during exertion, eating, or at rest), palpitations, fainting, and ankle swelling. Such questions help the dentist decide whether to perform surgery at all or to alter the surgical or anesthetic methods. If anxiety-controlling adjuncts such as intravenous (IV) and inhalation sedation are planned, the cardiovascular, respiratory, and nervous systems should always be reviewed; this can disclose previously undiagnosed problems that may jeopardize successful sedation. In the role of the oral health specialist, the dentist is expected to perform a quick review of the head, ears, eyes, nose, mouth, and throat on every patient, regardless of whether other systems are reviewed. Items to be reviewed are outlined in Box 1.4 .
Constitutional: Fever, chills, sweats, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, loss of appetite
Head: Headache, dizziness, fainting, insomnia
Ears: Decreased hearing, tinnitus (ringing), pain
Eyes: Blurring, double vision, excessive tearing, dryness, pain
Nose and sinuses: Rhinorrhea, epistaxis, problems breathing through nose, pain, change in sense of smell
Temporomandibular joint area: Pain, noise, limited jaw motion, locking
Oral: Dental pain or sensitivity, lip or mucosal sores, problems chewing, problems speaking, bad breath, loose restorations, sore throat, loud snoring
Neck: Difficulty swallowing, change in voice, pain, stiffness
The need to review organ systems in addition to those in the maxillofacial region depends on clinical circumstances. The cardiovascular and respiratory systems commonly require evaluation before oral surgery or sedation ( Box 1.5 ).
Chest discomfort on exertion, when eating, or at rest; palpitations; fainting; ankle edema; shortness of breath (dyspnea) on exertion; dyspnea on assuming supine position (orthopnea or paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea); postural hypotension; fatigue; leg muscle cramping
Dyspnea with exertion, wheezing, coughing, excessive sputum production, coughing up blood (hemoptysis)
The physical examination of the dental patient focuses on the oral cavity and, to a lesser degree, on the entire maxillofacial region. Recording the results of the physical examination should be an exercise in accurate description rather than a listing of suspected medical diagnoses. For example, the clinician may find a mucosal lesion inside the lower lip that is 5 mm in diameter, raised and firm, and not painful to palpation. These physical findings should be recorded in a similarly descriptive manner; the dentist should not jump to a diagnosis and record only “fibroma on lower lip.”
Any physical examination should begin with the measurement of vital signs. This serves as a screening device for unsuspected medical problems and as a baseline for future measurements. The techniques of measuring blood pressure and pulse rates are illustrated in Figs. 1.2 and 1.3 .
The physical evaluation of various parts of the body usually involves one or more of the following four primary means of evaluation: (1) inspection, (2) palpation, (3) percussion, and (4) auscultation. In the oral and maxillofacial regions, inspection should always be performed. The clinician should note hair distribution and texture, facial symmetry and proportion, eye movements and conjunctival color, nasal patency on each side, the presence or absence of skin lesions or discoloration, and neck or facial masses. A thorough inspection of the oral cavity is necessary, including the oropharynx, tongue, floor of the mouth, and oral mucosa ( Fig. 1.4 ).
Palpation is important when examining temporomandibular joint function, salivary gland size and function, thyroid gland size, presence or absence of enlarged or tender lymph nodes, and induration of oral soft tissues, as well as for determining pain or the presence of fluctuance in areas of swelling.
Physicians commonly use percussion during thoracic and abdominal examinations, and the dentist can use it to test teeth and paranasal sinuses. The dentist uses auscultation primarily for temporomandibular joint evaluation, but it is also used for cardiac, pulmonary, and gastrointestinal systems evaluations ( Box 1.6 ). A brief maxillofacial examination that all dentists should be able to perform is described in Box 1.7 .
Head and face: General shape, symmetry, hair distribution
Ear: Normal reaction to sounds (otoscopic examination if indicated)
Eye: Symmetry, size, reactivity of pupil, color of sclera and conjunctiva, movement, test of vision
Nose: Septum, mucosa, patency
Mouth: Teeth, mucosa, pharynx, lips, tonsils
Neck: Size of thyroid gland, jugular venous distention
Temporomandibular joint: Crepitus, tenderness
Paranasal: Pain over sinuses
Mouth: Salivary glands, floor of mouth, lips, muscles of mastication
Neck: Thyroid gland size, lymph nodes
Paranasal: Resonance over sinuses (difficult to assess)
Mouth: Teeth
Temporomandibular joint: Clicks, crepitus
Neck: Carotid bruits
While interviewing the patient, the dentist should visually examine the patient for general shape and symmetry of head and facial skeleton, eye movement, color of conjunctiva and sclera, and ability to hear. The clinician should listen for speech problems, temporomandibular joint sounds, and breathing ability.
Palpate and auscultate joints.
Measure range of motion of jaw and opening pattern.
Occlude nares individually to check for patency.
Inspect anterior nasal mucosa.
Take out all removable prostheses.
Inspect oral cavity for dental, oral, and pharyngeal mucosal lesions. Look at tonsils and uvula.
Hold tongue out of mouth with dry gauze while inspecting lateral borders.
Palpate tongue, lips, floor of mouth, and salivary glands (check for saliva).
Palpate neck for lymph nodes and thyroid gland size. Inspect jugular veins.
The results of the medical evaluation are used to assign a physical status classification. A few classification systems exist, but the one most commonly used is the American Society of Anesthesiologists' (ASA) physical status classification system ( Box 1.8 ).
ASA I: A normal, healthy patient
ASA II: A patient with mild systemic disease or significant health risk factor
ASA III: A patient with severe systemic disease that is not incapacitating
ASA IV: A patient with severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life
ASA V: A moribund patient who is not expected to survive without the operation
ASA VI: A declared brain-dead patient whose organs are being removed for donation purposes
Once an ASA physical status class has been determined, the dentist can decide whether required treatment can be safely and routinely performed in the dental office. If a patient is not an ASA class I or a relatively healthy class II patient, the practitioner generally has the following four options: (1) modifying routine treatment plans by anxiety-reduction measures, pharmacologic anxiety-control techniques, more careful monitoring of the patient during treatment, or a combination of these methods (this is usually all that is necessary for ASA class II); (2) obtaining medical consultation for guidance in preparing patients to undergo ambulatory oral surgery (e.g . , not fully reclining a patient with congestive heart failure [CHF], or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy [HCM]); (3) refusing to treat the patient in the ambulatory setting; or (4) referring the patient to an oral-maxillofacial surgeon . Modifications to the ASA system designed to be more specific to dentistry are available but are not yet widely used among health care professionals.
Patients with medical conditions sometimes require modifications of their perioperative care when oral surgery is planned. This section discusses those considerations for the major categories of health problems.
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