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Anesthesia for dental surgery?

Question:

I am scheduled for dental surgery (wisdom tooth and two others).

Because the dentist cannot put a throat tube down without interfering with his workspace, my sleep doctor is recommending local anesthetic only. I had a terrible time with that years ago and am very scared of it.

I have an appointment next week to talk to my sleep doctor some more, but would like to know if any OSA patients have had dental surgery and what the dentist used on you ...


Answer:

I'm a nitrous oxide fan, it cured my long-standing fear of dentists and got me through a few root-canals. You'll still need shots for the pain, but you won't much care.

I just had a lot of dental work done ( 3 hours per time) and since normal local does not work for me I got it done with IV sedation. I was hooked up to an IV drip which made me "sleep", an oximeter? ( thing on your finger to measure oxygen) and blood pressure cuff, both of which readings was in full view of the dentist. Also, the dentist did have the chair at some angle at all times. As soon as he is done you are out of the sedation, however even though awake, you probably will miss part of your trip home; i.e. someone has to be with you and drive you home, but you are very willing :-) LAst time it was snowing and I had no clue, neither did I remember my DH told me to walk with him instead of me being in a wheel chair, but apparently a person is very co-operative. All 3 times went to sleep at home for a couple of hours and had the best sleep ever. I felt wonderful the next day. To bad that didn't last. Best thing was no memories of pain etc. and you are "wake" right away and have a loved one with you immediately so no chance of nobody watching you. Mine was through the hospital dentist ( they do a lot of work for handicapped people), so you might want to check into that. Oxygen was right there in the room in case it was needed. My 18 year old just had toe surgery using IV sedation and was very pleased with this. That was only 1/2 hour and he remembered everything afterwards but had an early night.

As a result of past problems with 'plain old' dentists before OSA diagnosis, and one year personal experience with OSA and this newsgroup, I would be inclined to let a maxillo-facial surgeon do the work. At the least, a dental surgeon, not just a dentist.

I am definitely doing that. But the maxillofacial surgeon does not know much about OSA. He consulted with my sleep doc by phone and the sleep doc said "local only"! I am going in this week to talk to the sleep doc and plead for a better answer ...

Makes me wonder if the teeth being extracted are on both sides of your mouth, and if they weren't, whether a tube would still be in the way. If this is, indeed, the situation, you might want to consider two surgeries. It has been my experience, and I thought it was common to not remove wisdom teeth (particularly if they are impacted) on both side at the same time, because it makes it very difficult to eat. I realize you are only having one wisdom tooth removed, however......... the thought still holds.

One of the possibilities I am going to discuss. The dental surgeon mentioned it, but of course the cost is exhorbitant compared to office surgery and my insurance won't cover it...



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