1 / 52

Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice Part I

Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice Part I. Abtin Shahriari DMD, MPH Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon Staff Attending Northside Hospital Staff Attending Atlanta Medical Center. Medical Emergencies in Dental Office . Objectives Present various emergency situations Definition Causes

cili
Download Presentation

Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice Part I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Emergencies in Dental Practice Part I Abtin Shahriari DMD, MPH Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon Staff Attending Northside Hospital Staff Attending Atlanta Medical Center

  2. Medical Emergencies in Dental Office • Objectives • Present various emergency situations • Definition • Causes • Signs/Symptoms • Treatment • Prevention

  3. Medical Emergencies in Dental Office • Outline: I. Loss of consciousness II. Respiratory distress III. Chest pain IV. Cardiac dysrythmias V. Allergy/Drug Reactions VI. Altered sensation VII. Stroke VIII. Blood Pressure Abnormalities IX. Emesis/Aspiration X. Malignant Hyperthermia

  4. Be prepared

  5. Most office emergencies are minor, but should be aggressively treated before they become major problems

  6. P-R-A-Y • Preparedness- of the office and personnel to treat the impending emergency in a timely and efficient manner. • Recognition- of predisposing signs and symptoms of an impending emergency • Action- Develop a plan to stabilize and support the emergency patient • Yell- To know when and where to obtain help in activating EMS when necessary

  7. Loss of Consciousness (LOC) • Syncope • Hypoglycemia • Cardiac arrest

  8. LOC- Syncope • Definition: • Sudden brief loss of consciousness caused by decreased blood flow to the CNS. • Usually the victim regains consciousness within a few minutes, but prolonged LOC leads to a seizure

  9. LOC- Syncope • Causes: • Vasovagal • Panic/Anxiety • Hypoglycemia • Heart Disease (arrhythmia/blocks) • Seizures • Diseases that interfere with CNS regulation of BP (vasodepressor) & HR (cardioinhibitory) • DM • ETOH • BP Medications

  10. LOC- Syncope • Signs/Symptoms • Presyncope • Nausea • Sensation of warmth • Light-headedness • Diaphoresis • Palor • Tachycardia • Syncopal Stage (LOC) • Hypotension • Bradycardia • Pupillary dilation

  11. LOC- Syncope • Treatment: • Early • Trendelenberg • Assess level of consciousness • ABCs • Cause Checklist • Medication • Hypoglycemia • CVA • Seizure • Arryhthmias • Anaphylaxis • Anxiety attack • Head tilt • 100% Oxygen • Monitor BP/Pulse/Respirations • Ammonia capsule • Cold compresses to forehead & neck • Reassure patient

  12. LOC- Syncope • Treatment: • Advanced • LOC>5 minutes or recovery > 20 minutes • 911 • Activate ACLS • ABC’s • IV access

  13. LOC- Syncope • Bradycardia<60 bpm, symptoms: • Altered mental status • Chest pain • Hypotension • SOB • Seizures • Syncope

  14. LOC- Syncope • Prevention (1 ounce= 1 pound of cure) • Sedation as needed • Monitor carefully • Supine position • 100% oxygen early • Identify presyncopal stage

  15. LOC- Syncope • Summary • Trendelenberg • Airway • 100% oxygen • Cold compress/ammonia • Assess LOC • Monitor vital signs

  16. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Definition: • Reduction in blood glucose levels to below 50 mg/dl, resulting in glucose deprivation of the CNS • Causes: • Excessive insulin/ oral hypoglycemic therapy • Missed/delayed meals • Illness/infection • Excessive exercise • Alcohol ingestion

  17. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Signs/Symptoms • Mild- (<60-65 mg/dl) • Cold clammy wet skin • Extreme hunger • Nausea • Tachycardia • Numbness/ tingling fingers • Trembling

  18. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Signs/Symptoms • Moderate- (<50 mg/dl) • Extreme tiredness • Irritability • Anxiety • Restlessness • Fatigue/lethargy • Headache • Dizziness • Slurred speech • Severe (<10 mg/dl) • LOC • Seizures • Hypothermia • Coma

  19. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Treatment • Early- patient is conscious • Stop treatment • Supine position • Maintain airway • Monitor vitals • Check blood glucose level • Treat if less than 50 mg/dl, • Oral glucose • Regular soft drink, fruit juice ½ cup

  20. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Treatment • Advanced (patient becomes unconscious) • Basic life support (BLS) • ActivateEmergency Medical Service (EMS) • With IV access • One ampoule glucose (50ml of 50% solution) • Check blood glucose q10 min • I.V. infusion of 5% to 20% dextrose solution • Without IV access • One mg glucagon IM • Check blood glucose q 10 min • Repeat glucagon as needed

  21. LOC- Hypoglycemia • PREVENTION • H&P • Maintain glycemic/insulin control, avoid hyper- or hypo- glycemia. • Short appointments/early AM • Early identification and management

  22. LOC- Hypoglycemia • Preoperative- • Type I DMconsider: • ½ dose insulin if fasting • Measure blood glucose on presentation • IV D5W • Type II DM • Avoid oral hypoglycemic medication on the morning of surgery • Metformin, Glyburide • Check blood glucose on presentation

  23. LOC- Hypoglycemia • SUMMARY • Stop treatment • Supine position • Airway • Monitor vitals • Check blood glucose levels • Oral glucose

  24. LOC- Cardiac arrest • ABCs of CPR • Check responsiveness • If no response call 911 • AED/ defibrillator • Start CPR • A- AIRWAY- Open airway with head tilt chin lift • B- BREATHING- Look, listen, feel for breathing • If not breathing give 2 rescue breaths • C- CIRCULATION- Check pulse, look for other signs of circulation such as breathing, movement & coughing • If no pulse begin chest compressions between nipples • 30 compressions @ rate of 100/min • 30 to 2 compressions to ventilation ratio • New guidelines: the compressions are more important than ventilation

  25. LOC- Cardiac arrest • ABCs of CPR Cont. • When to Shock- VF or pulse-less VT • If shock does not workadd pressors to treatment. • Epinephrine 1 mg • Vasopressin 40 units 1 time • When not to Shock • Pulseless electrical activity- PEA • Asystole • Epinephrine, Vasopressin, Sodium bicarbonate, Magnesium

  26. LOC- Cardiac arrest • ABCs of CPR Cont’ • Think of the cause: • 5Hs • Hypoxia • Hypovolemia • Hyperthermia • Hyper/Hypokalemia • Hyperglycemia • 5Ts • Toxins • Tamponade • Tension Pneumothorax • Thrombosis • Trauma

  27. Respiratory Distress (RD) • Laryngospasm • Airway obstruction • Dyspnea • Bronchospasm/ Asthma

  28. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • Definition: • A protective reflex to prevent foreign matter from entering the larynx, trachea, or lungs. • Cause: • Foreign material in the region of the vocal cords. • Light general anesthesia.

  29. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • Signs/Symptoms • Increased respiratory effort • “Crowing” sound- partial laryngospasm • No air movement or sound- complete laryngospasm • Development of cardiac arrhythmias secondary to: • Hypoxia • Hypercarbia • Hyperkalemia

  30. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • Treatment • Early: • Rapid recognition and initiation oftreatmentis essential • Pack off surgical site • 100% oxygen • Immediate pharyngeal suction (yankhauer) • Head-tilt position to establish and maintain airway • Pull tongue anterior (towel clip, Russian, Suture) • Observe/ listen for air exchange

  31. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • Treatment • Advanced: • Complete spasm: positive pressure 100% O2 • Continuing spasm: Anectine 10-20 mg IV • Prepare for intubation. • After Anectine you must breath for the patient until they recover. • Assist ventilation until and after respiration returns as needed. • Kids without IV give Anectine IM 3-4 mg/Kg or One mg/kg sublingual

  32. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • PREVENTION: • Throat pack • Proper airway management • Adequate suctioning • Deepen anesthesia- with partial laryngospasm

  33. Respiratory Distress: Laryngospasm • Summary: • Pack off surgical site • 100% oxygen • Suction • Tongue position anteriorly

  34. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Definition: • Obstruction caused by soft tissue in the head & neck, bronchoconstriction, secretions, or solids causing a decrease or absence of ventilatory movement. • Cause: • Supraglotic- Tongue displaced posteriorly due to loss of tone of pharyngeal muscles secondary to anesthesia or sedation. • Foreign body in larynx and pharynx- secretions or solids.

  35. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Sign/Symptoms • Choking • Gagging • Violent expiratory effort • Substernal notch retraction • Cyanosis • Labored breathing • Tachycardia, followed by bradycardia, • Respiratory arrest • Cardiac arrest

  36. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Airway obstruction leads to hypoxia which leads to cardiovascular complications.

  37. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Early • Position upright • Pack off surgical site • Suction oropharynx • Tongue traction • Gauze • Tongue forceps • Hemostat • Suture

  38. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Advanced • Place patient supine • Chin-lift, jaw-thrust • Tilt head back and continue to try to open airway • Check for sounds of respiration and ventilate if possible • Abdominal thrusts if unable to ventilate

  39. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Advanced • Continued obstruction • Oral/Pharyngeal airway • Positive pressure ventilation

  40. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Advanced • Continued obstruction • LMA • ET tube

  41. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Advanced • Continued obstruction • Oxygen via transtracheal catheter • Activate EMS

  42. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Treatment: Advanced • Continued obstruction • Cricothyrotomy

  43. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Signs of deterioration • Cyanosis • LOC • Cardiac or respiratory arrest • Re-establish airway before addressing circulatory issues • Re-evaluate diagnosis • Maintain BLS • Signs of recovery • Normal breathing returns • Foreign body removed or swallowed

  44. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Swallowed Objects: • Cough to attempt to remove it • Sit upright fast and coughing if conscious • Complete airway obstructions • Heimlich- Adult and kids > 1year old • Partial obstruction • Heimlich NOT recommended • Coughing

  45. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Swallowed Objects: • Heimlich maneuver • Stand behind patient • Place a fist of one hand slightly above navel • Grasp fist with other hand • Quick upwards thrusts to the abdomen • Chest thrusts in pregnant women • Continue until object is expelled or LOC occurs

  46. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • An inhaled object not coughed out: • X-ray chest and upper GI • Some GI and all pulmonary objects must be removed.

  47. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Prevention • Proper throat pack • Removal of dentures, partials • Adequate suctioning • Adequate visualization of the surgical field • Maintain head position

  48. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Chocking and Looses Consciousness: • 911 • Lower patient to ground • Place patient on their back • Tongue-jaw lift and finger sweep • Open airway and attempt ventilation • If obstructed reposition and try again • If obstruction persists give 5 abdominal thrusts using the heel of onehand above the navel • Repeat until obstruction is relieved • Consider surgical airway

  49. Respiratory Distress: Airway Obstruction • Summary • Upright position • Pack off surgical site • Suction • Determine if obstruction is indeed occurring • Heimlich maneuver

  50. Respiratory Distress:Dyspnea • Definition: • The sensation of labored, difficult, and uncomfortable breathing. It occurs when there is inadequate control of respiration, oxygenation and ventilation. • Cause: • Heart disease • COPD ( asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis) • Anxiety/hyperventilation • Aspiration • Lung infection • Pulmonary embolism

More Related