Dental and oral problems
For assessment — see mouth, throat, teeth and gums examination
Oral health messages
- Do not smoke (tobacco or cannabis) — increases risk of dental, gum and mouth disease
- Clean teeth and gums morning and night with soft toothbrush and fluoride toothpaste
- Spit, don't rinse after brushing
- Avoid regular use of mouthwash containing alcohol —short-term use is OK
- Eat healthy foods — avoid sweet food and drink, especially between meals
- Don't drink fruit juices, soft drinks, cordial, sports drinks, flavoured milk or anything fizzy even if sugar free
- Drink plenty of water and some milk
- Chew sugar free gum
- Control diabetes — will lower risk of bad gums and tooth loss
- Have a yearly dental and oral health check
Managing pain in teeth or gums
Table 7.8 Pain in teeth or gums
©Kingon A. Solving dental problems in general practice. Aust Fam Physician 2009;38(4):211–16. Adapted with permission
Oil of Cloves (eugenol) should not be supplied to patients to take home
Dental pain relief
Continue treatment for the shortest duration possible and no more than 3 days without review
Contraindications for NSAIDs
- eGFR less than 25 or unknown
- Severe heart failure AND taking diuretic AND ACE inhibitor or ARB
- Severe asthma
- High cardiovascular risk
- Stomach ulcers
- Severe hepatic impairment
- Severe bleeding, eg suspected ruptured organ
- If pregnant — medical consult before giving
Child
- Paracetamol — 15mg/kg/dose up to 1g, up to 4 times a day (qid)
OR ibuprofen if no contraindications, oral — 10mg/kg/dose up to 400mg — doses — up to 3 times a day (tds)
- Can also be combined for enhanced pain management
Adult
- Mild to moderate pain
- Paracetamol oral — 1g, up to 4 times a day (qid)
AND ibuprofen if no contraindications, oral — 400mg, every 6–8 hours (no more than 4 tablets (1600mg) in a day
- Severe pain — after maximum regular doses of ibuprofen AND paracetamol have been tried
- Stop regular paracetamol, continue ibuprofen, if no contraindication
AND paracetamol-codeine oral — 1000+60mg, repeat once if required after 4 hours then medical consult
- If ibuprofen contraindicated — continue paracetamol AND do medical consult for oxycodone immediate-release, if available, oral — 5 mg, every 4 to 6 hours as necessary
Gums and soft tissue
Dry mouth
- Reduced saliva reduces health and comfort of mouth and increases the risk of dental decay and severity of gum disease
- Main causes are mouth breathing , smoking, medicines, dehydration, infections, cancer treatments
Do
- Try to find cause — dental/medical consult if needed
- See oral health messages
- Tell person
- Stimulate salivary glands by chewing food well, chewing sugar-free gum or sugar free sweets —non-fruit flavours are less acidic
- Use bicarbonate soda mouthwash (half teaspoon of bicarbonate soda in a glass of water) and spit out — rinse as soon as you get up and any time during day
Mouth ulcers
Common causes include
- Minor physical trauma, eg from food burn, sharp or rough food, broken tooth, broken fillings, dentures, orthodontic appliances
- Chemical trauma, eg from prolonged exposure to chewing tobacco, aspirin burn, tooth-bleaching products
- Infection, eg virus
- Immune response, autoimmune disease, eg Crohn’s disease
Do
- Paracetamol (doses) and lidocaine (lignocaine) gel for pain
- Use saltwater OR chlorhexidine 0.2% mouthwash — 10mL
- Rinse for 1 minute, 3 times a day (tds)
- Will help stop infection and keep mouth clean
- Adults with ulcers not healed within 2 weeks OR recurring — medical consult to send to hospital for biopsy — potential tumour
- Young child with severe ulcers
- Medical consult to consider antiviral treatment
- Check for dehydration — may not be drinking if mouth sore
- If child not eating — send to hospital
Chronic gum disease
Ongoing inflammation of gums without pain
- Chronic gingivitis — red, swollen gums that bleed easily
- Chronic periodontitis — can result from gingivitis
- Inflammation affects supporting bone and tissues of the teeth. May cause gum recession and bone loss and teeth loose or fall out
- Risk factors include smoking and poorly controlled diabetes
Do
- Dental consult
- If child has periodontitis — urgent dental consult
- See oral health messages
- If brushing difficult — use chlorhexidine 0.2% mouthwash — 10mL
- Rinse for 1 minute and spit out, 3 times a day (tds) for 5–10 days
- Control diabetes
Acute gum disease
- Acute ulcerative gingivitis — painful, red, swollen gums that bleed easily
- Periodontal abscess — painful local gum abscess
Acute ulcerative gingivitis
Risk factors — poor oral hygiene, smoking, stress, weakened immune system
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Intense pain
- Ulcerated tissue in gums between teeth
- Spontaneous (sudden) bleeding of gums
- Very bad breath
- May also have fever, general discomfort, inflammation of lymph nodes
Do
- Give dental pain relief
- Give metronidazole oral — adult 400mg, child 10mg/kg/dose up to 400mg — doses — twice a day (bd) for 5 days
- If allergy — medical consult
- Urgent dental consult
- If painful and difficult to brush teeth — use chlorhexidine 0.2% mouthwash — 10mL, rinse for 1 minute and spit out, 3 times a day (tds) for at least 5 days
- Good oral hygiene — brushing ulcerated area may not be possible due to pain
Periodontal abscess
Risk factors — existing gum disease, uncontrolled diabetes, poor oral hygiene
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Pain, discomfort — can be difficult to localise
- Swollen gum next to tooth/teeth without hole or decay
- Can be on palate and difficult to see
Do
- Give dental pain relief if needed
- If abscess with no systemic features — antibiotic cover only if not receiving dental
care within 24 hours OR if weakened immune system
- Amoxicillin+clavulanic acid oral — adult 875+125mg (child 2 months or older: 22.5+3.2mg/kg up to 875+125 mg) — doses — twice a day (bd) for 5 days
OR If allergy to penicillin — clindamycin oral — adult 300mg, child 7.5mg/kg up to 300mg — doses — 3 times a day (tid) for 5 days
- Dental consult about lancing, debriding, extraction
Facial swelling due to spreading infection
Spreading odontogenic infection with severe or systemic features can rapidly become life threatening — because of the risk of airway obstruction and sepsis
- Localised tooth-related infections are caused by
- Pulp necrosis (death of tooth nerve) due to decay or trauma
- Periodontal disease (gum infections)
- Infection around crown of erupting tooth, eg wisdom tooth
- Facial swelling (spreading odontogenic infection) may be with OR without severe or systemic features
- Severe — significant facial swelling and pain, trismus (difficulty opening jaw), neck swelling, difficulty breathing or airway compromise
- Systemic — pallor, sweating, tachycardia, an axillary temperature more than 38°C or sepsis
- Do not treat with antibiotics alone — must do dental/medical consult about treating underlying cause
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Mouth, throat, teeth and gums examination
- If severe or systemic features — must assess for limited mouth opening
- If mouth opens less than 2cm — must assess for airway problems
- Difficult or noisy breathing
- Difficulty swallowing
- Tongue raised and rigid
Do if airway compromised
- Remember — see Life support — DRS ABC
- If facial swelling (spreading infection) with severe or systemic features — medical consult to send to hospital urgently
- Give oxygen
- to target O2 sats 94–98%
- OR if moderate/severe COPD 88–92%
- Put in IV cannula
- Give metronidazole IV — adult 500mg, child 12.5mg/kg/dose up to 500mg — doses — every 12 hours (bd)
- AND benzylpenicillin IV — adult 1.2g, child 30mg/kg/dose up to 1.2g — doses — every 6 hours (qid)
- If allergy to penicillin — medical consult
Do if airway satisfactory
- Make sure person is hydrated
- Give dental pain relief
- Give amoxicillin+clavulanic acid oral — 875+125 mg (child 2 months or older: 22.5+3.2 mg/kg up to 875+125 mg), twice a day (bd) for 5 day — doses
- If allergy to penicillin — give clindamycin oral — 300mg, child 7.5 mg/kg up to 300 mg, 3 times a day for 5 days — doses
- If skilled and abscess pointing — lance
- Urgent dental/medical consult to drain pus and remove cause, eg extract tooth/teeth
Follow-up
- Review in 2–3 days
- If not improving — medical consult
Dental trauma
Knocked out adult tooth
Check
- Head-to-toe exam — with attention to head and neck injuries
- Immunisation status — tetanus
Do not
- Do not touch root of tooth — only crown
- Do not allow tooth to dry out — store in milk or saline (not water) or wrap in cling wrap
- Do not replant primary (baby) teeth
Do
- If RHD, artificial heart valve, heart transplant, history of bacterial endocarditis or congenital heart problem — give IV preventive antibiotics before replacing tooth
- Replace and splint tooth in place as quickly as possible — see Replacing knocked out adult tooth
- Recommend short-term use of chlorhexidine mouthwash after replantation while the tooth is splinted
- chlorhexidine 0.2% mouthwash — 10mL rinsed in the mouth for 1 minute and spit out, 3 times a day
- If chlorhexidine used for more than a few days — may cause discolouration of teeth and fillings
- Give doxycycline oral — adult 100mg, child — doses — once a day for 7 days
- If pregnant — medical consult
- If allergy — medical consult
- Urgent dental/medical consult
Broken or loose tooth
See Broken tooth (fractured tooth crown) OR Loose or displaced tooth — adult or child
Broken jaw
- If unconscious with jaw injury — secure airway, pull jaw forward (jaw thrust) — see Life support — DRS ABC, Injuries — head
- Treat any serious injury to face below cheek bones as broken jaw — can lead to bone infection if not treated
- If mechanism or injuries suggest neck injury — put on cervical collar (may make jaw more painful) AND assess situation
Ask
- About pain, especially when moving jaw
- Any trouble swallowing or eating
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Head-to-toe exam — with attention to
- Bony tenderness or numbness of any part of jaw
- Swelling, bleeding, bleeding in floor of mouth, wounds — most jaw fractures are compound
- Do upper and lower teeth meet together properly — ask person to bite on spatula
- Do teeth line up properly along each jaw
- Look for difference in outline between one side of jaw/face and other side
- Feel for step in line of teeth or jaw
- Immunisation status — tetanus
Do
- Medical consult to determine antibiotic choice
- Sit person up — lean them forward to let blood and saliva drain
- Give antiemetic to stop vomiting
- Give pain relief