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 | MANAGEMENT OF PAIN & ANXIETY IN THE DENTAL OFFICE
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By
Raymond Dionne, DDS, PhD, National Institute of Dental Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
James Phero, DMD, Professor of Clinical Anesthesia, Clinical Pediatrics, and Clinical Surgery, University of Cincinnati, College of Medicine; Co-Director,
Head & Neck Section, University Pain Control, Greater Cincinnati Pain Consortium, The Barret Center, Cincinnati, OH
Daniel Becker, MD, Professor, Allied Health Sciences, Sinclair Community College, Dayton, OH
Description
Treating acute pain requires a foundation of basic and clinical sciences, and Management of Pain and Anxiety in the Dental Office presents
all the scientific and technical aspects of pain and anxiety control that are useful in dentistry. In this practical resource, leading
authorities explain the principles of pharmacology and physiology required to properly assess the patient's medical status and monitor
vital physiologic functions during sedation and anesthesia. It identifies the principles of pain and anxiety, examines the pharmacologic
considerations of working with patients who are anxious or in acute pain, and discusses the intraoperative management of pain and anxiety,
as well as addressing the diagnosis and management of chronic orofacial pain. Separate chapters are devoted to pediatric patients, the
developmentally disabled, TMD, and many other timely topics.
Contents
PART 1: PRINCIPLES OF PAIN AND ANXIETY CONTROL Overcoming pain and anxiety in dentistry Raymond A. Dionne and Yuzuru Kaneko
Mechanisms
of orofacial pain and analgesia Kenneth M. Hargreaves and Stephen B. Milam
Nonpharmacologic methods for managing pain and anxiety Peter
Milgrom
Basic physiologic considerations Daniel E. Becker and Bruce E. Bradley
Preoperative assessment Daniel E.
Becker
PART 2: PHARMACOLOGIC CONSIDERATIONS
Local anesthetics John A. Yagiela
Therapeutic uses of non-opioid
analgesics Raymond A. Dionne, Charles Berthold, and Stephen A. Cooper
Opioid analgesics and antagonists Daniel A. Haas
Anxiolytics
and sedative-hypnotics Daniel E. Becker and Paul A. Moore
General anesthetics Daniel E. Becker
PART 3: INTRAOPERATIVE
MANAGEMENT OF PAIN AND ANXIETY
Monitoring John P. Lawrence and Hideo Matsuura
Airway management Jenny Z. Mitchell
and James A. Roelofse
Local anesthetic techniques and adjuncts J. Mel Hawkins and John Gerard Meechan
Nitrous oxide
sedation Raymond S. Garrison, Stephen R. Holliday, and David P. Kretzschmar
Oral and rectal sedation Raymond A. Dionne and
Larry D. Trapp
Intravenous and intramuscular sedation Daniel E. Becker and C. Richard Bennett
Deep sedation and general
anesthesia Morton B. Rosenberg and Leonard J. Lind
Management of complications and emergencies Daniel E. Becker and James
C. Phero
PART 4: MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS WITH SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS
Pediatric sedation Milton I. Houpt and Joseph A. Giovannitti,
Jr.
Anesthesia for the developmentally disabled patient Jeffrey D. Bennett and John W. Leyman
PART 5: DIAGNOSIS AND
MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC OROFACIAL PAIN
Behavioral management in patients with temporomandibular disorders Kate M. Hathaway and
George E. Parsons
Diagnosis of chronic orofacial pain Yoshiki Imamura and Jeffrey P. Okeson
Pharmacologic treatments
for temporomandibular disorders and other orofacial pain Lauren E. Ta, John K. Neubert, and Raymond A. Dionne
Physical medicine
for masticatory pain and dysfunction Glenn T. Clark
Treatment of stomatitis and oropharyngeal pain in the oncology patient 50.
Jane M. Fall-Dickson
| Bibliographic details |
Hardbound, 430 pages, publication date: FEB-2002
ISBN-13: 978-0-7216-7278-6
ISBN-10: 0-7216-7278-7
Imprint: SAUNDERS
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024/226
Last update: 10 Sep 2009
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