Nakai Y, Milgrom P, Mancl L, Coldwell S E, Domoto P K, Ramsay D S
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, University of Washington, Seattle, Box 357475, Seattle, WA 98195-7475, USA.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2000 Dec;131(12):1699-705. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2000.0115.
Pain control in dental treatment for children is very important. The purpose of this study is to describe the characteristics of local anesthetic use by pediatric dentists and to examine factors related to its effectiveness in children.
The authors observed 361 patients in 17 pediatric dental practices in Washington state while each child received restorative or surgical dental treatment. The authors recorded data concerning local anesthetic use and effectiveness. The children's mean age was 87 months, and 181 (50.1 percent) of the patients were girls. A pediatric dentist observer rated each child's anxiety before the initial injection of local anesthetic and the effectiveness of pain control during restorative treatment. The observing dentist asked the treating dentist about the effectiveness of pain control after completion of treatment.
Forty-two of 361 children (11.6 percent) were observed to experience ineffective pain control. Fourteen of 17 dentists (82.4 percent) were observed to have at least one patient in whom pain control was ineffective. Lidocaine (2 percent with 1:100,000 epinephrine) was used by 15 of 17 dentists (88.2 percent) and in 312 of 361 cases (86.4 percent). The average amount of agent was one cartridge (36 milligrams of lidocaine). Children who were anxious, who had symptoms before treatment, and who underwent more invasive operative and endodontic procedures were more likely to experience ineffective pain control.
The data suggest that painful treatment is relatively frequent even in specialized pediatric practice. Variability in general practice is likely to be greater.
The incidence of ineffective pain control may be less if clinicians use methods to reduce anxiety and perioperative infection and symptoms.
儿童牙科治疗中的疼痛控制非常重要。本研究的目的是描述儿科牙医使用局部麻醉剂的特点,并探讨与儿童局部麻醉效果相关的因素。
作者观察了华盛顿州17家儿科牙科诊所的361名患者,每位儿童接受修复或外科牙科治疗。作者记录了有关局部麻醉剂使用和效果的数据。儿童的平均年龄为87个月,其中181名(50.1%)患者为女孩。一名儿科牙医观察者对每位儿童在首次注射局部麻醉剂前的焦虑程度以及修复治疗期间的疼痛控制效果进行评分。观察牙医在治疗完成后询问治疗牙医疼痛控制的效果。
361名儿童中有42名(11.6%)被观察到疼痛控制无效。17名牙医中有14名(82.4%)被观察到至少有一名患者疼痛控制无效。17名牙医中有15名(88.2%)使用了利多卡因(2%加1:100,000肾上腺素),361例中有312例(86.4%)使用了该药物。药物的平均用量为一支(36毫克利多卡因)。焦虑、治疗前有症状以及接受更具侵入性的手术和牙髓治疗的儿童更有可能疼痛控制无效。
数据表明,即使在专业的儿科诊疗中,疼痛治疗也相对常见。普通诊疗中的差异可能更大。
如果临床医生采用方法减轻焦虑、减少围手术期感染和症状,疼痛控制无效的发生率可能会降低。