Anesthesia & pain control in dentistry
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Arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) was monitored postoperatively with pulse oximetry in 80 dental patients receiving nitrous oxide and oxygen. These patients were divided into four equal groups, three of which received nitrous oxide (N2O) and oxygen (O2) in ratios of 20:80, 40:60, and 60:40, respectively. The fourth group received 100% O2 and served as the control. ⋯ One patient in the 40% N2O group experienced an SaO2 of less than 90%, but no patient experienced clinically significant hypoxia. In the 40% and 60% N2O groups, the percent change of SaO2 from the baseline was greater, and the SaO2 returned to baseline slower. The difference in mean SaO2 between smokers and nonsmokers was greater in the 40% N2O group.
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Anesth Pain Control Dent · Jan 1993
Prevention of anaphylactic-anaphylactoid reactions to anesthetics in high-risk allergic patients.
To confirm the role of preventive procedures in high-risk allergic patients, immunological tests in vivo for anesthetics were carried out in 251 atopic patients. The 6-month follow-up showed a complete absence of adverse reactions during the clinical use of hypnotic and muscle relaxant drugs. In the case of local anesthetics, five adverse reactions were observed after dental treatment--four were related to a psychogenic mechanism, and one could not be clearly linked to the local anesthetic. It is possible to confirm that the use of a tested drug that yields negative results has a lower probability of inducing anaphylactic-anaphylactoid reactions during anesthesia.