nitrous oxide sedation in pediatric dentistry dr.s.e.jabbarifar 2009
TRANSCRIPT
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Nitrous Oxide Nitrous Oxide Sedation in Pediatric Sedation in Pediatric
DentistryDentistry
Dr.S.E.Jabbarifar 2009
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History of N2O
Dr. Horace Wells
1793 - Joseph Priestly invented N2O
Initially used as an anesthetic agent in 1844.
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N2O Commonly Used (and misused)
88% of Pediatric Dentists use N2O, and about 58% of general dentists use N2O.
Deadheads inhaling N2O from a balloon.
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Purpose of Nitrous Oxide Sedation
Reduce fear, apprehension, or anxiety
Raise pain reaction threshold Reduce fatigue
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Fear Reduction & N2O
One group treated with behavior management only; other group with behavior management and N2O.
Dental treatment of highly fearful children is carried out more successfully with N2O during the first few sessions.
N2O is thus a valuable aid for making highly fearful children treatable quickly.
Veerkamp, et al, J Dent Child, May-June 1993
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Fear Reduction & N2O
When highly anxious children are treated with nitrous oxide for a number of consecutive sessions, their anxiety remains significantly lower during a following control period, even without use of nitrous oxide.
Veerkamp, et al, J Dent Child, Jan-Feb 1995
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Fear Reduction and N2O
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Increase Pain Reaction Threshold
0 15 3045
Pain
Th
resh
old
Pain
To
lera
nce0
10
20
30
40
50
m Amps
% Nitrous Oxide
NO Concentration vs. Pain Threshold and Tolerance
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Four Stages of Anesthesia
Analgesiapatient is conscious reflexes are intact
Delerium Surgical Anesthesia Respiratory Paralysis
The patient is unconscious in Stages 2, 3, and 4.
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Analgesia
In analgesia stage, the patient is conscious, has all vital reflexes intact, can communicate and cooperate with the dentist, and quickly returns to a normal state following a few minutes of oxygenation.
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Four Plateaus of Analgesia
Paresthesia - tingling of hands, feet Vasomotor - warm sensations Drift - euphoria, pupils centrally fixed,
sensation of floating Dream - eyes closed but will open in
response to questions, difficulty in speaking, jaw sags open
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N2O Should Be Used To:
Ease fears and anxieties Aid in the treatment of special
patients Increase tolerance for longer
appointments Raise the pain reaction threshold
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N2O Should Not Be Used To:
Control defiant or uncontrolled behavior
Control pain by replacing local anesthesia
Replace poor techniques of behavior management
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Uptake and Saturation of N2O
Blood
Tissue Saturation
PROBLEMS!!!
Less Uptake N2O from Lungs
Lungs
Effective PP in Brain
Increase Lung N2O Concentration
Highly Perfused Tissues
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Signs of Saturation
Reminding child continuously to hold mouth open
No response to questions Agitation Sweating Nausea Unconsciousness
Monitor Frequently
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Reduce N2O Dosage...
with lengthy administration (> 30 min.).
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Inhalation Analgesia Permits - State of Nebraska
Portable oxygen tank Delivery system that delivers a maximum
of 80% N2O Medical history Physical evaluation ("...vital signs such as
pulse, blood pressure, respirations, temperature and weight..."
Oral pharyngeal airways available Emergency drugs
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Elimination of N2O
Rapid Primarily through the lungs Small amount through skin, sweat
glands, urine, and intestinal gas
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Diffusion Hypoxia
High outpouring of N2O Dilutes available oxygen in lungs
Ventilate the patient for 3 to 5 minutes to prevent diffusion hypoxia!
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Effects on Systems
CNS - primary system effected by N2O
Respiratory respiratory rate increasedecrease tidal volumeN2O potentiates respiratory depression
with concommitant use of narcotics, barbiturates, or other sedatives
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Effects on Systems
Cardiovascularnormally, no meaningful changes in
heart rate or pressuremyocardial depression with cardiac
decompensation (congestive heart failure)
patients with ischemic heart disease without decompensation may benefit from N2O
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Myocardial Depression with N2O Use in CHF Patients
2.2
2.4
2.6
2.83
3.2
3.4
3.6
100% O2 50% N2O
Cardiac Index
Normal LVEDP Elevated LVEDP
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Effects on Systems Fetal
1967 (Vaisman) - report showing increased incidence of spontaneous abortion among femal Russian anesthesiologists
1980 (Cohen, et al) - report showing increased spontaneous abortion rates (2.3) for DAs and unexposed wives of DDSs who used N2O in their practices; also higher rates of liver, kidney and neurological disease
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Effects on Systems
Fetal (cont.)1992 (Rowland, et al.) - demonstrated
reduced fertility among female DAs exposed to ambient levels of unscavenged N2O for longer than five hours per week; the concentration and length of exposure that produce any of these effects remain undocumented.
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Chronic Exposure to N2O
“Long-term (chronic) exposure to nitrous oxide in sufficient concentrations can produce irreversible, toxic changes, and should be a concern for dental personnel working in environments in which nitrous oxide is administered to patients.”
Howard, JADA, March 1997
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Chronic Exposure Disorders
Reproductive Hematologic Immunological Neurological Liver Kidney
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Neurological Symptoms of Chronic Exposure
Loss of concentration Numbness and
paresthesia Ataxia Impotence Loss of bladder control Loss of bowel
sphincter control
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Safe Concentrations of N2O
OSHA - not established NIOSH - recommended exposure limit
(REL) 25ppm during administrations ACGIH (American Conference of
Governmental Industrial Hygienists) 50 ppm threshold limit value (TLV) over 8 hour TWA (time weighted average)
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Safe Concentrations of N2O
Nitrous Oxide Guidance
ADA met with OSHA's second in command, Deputy Assistant Secretary James Stanley, Sept. 18 after learning that a draft OSHA "technical guidance" document on anesthetic gases apparently imposes on dental offices a nitrous oxide level of 25 ppm, a level technologically out of reach and far below that associated with adverse health effects. ADA pointed out that the Association's expert panel, which met Sept. 12 and 13 and included an OSHA engineer, agreed the 25 ppm level is unjustified by scientific data. ADA will submit written comments on the OSHA draft by the end of October. (September 26)
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Safe Concentrations of N2O
ADA - has not proposed a permissible exposure limit, but emphasizes the routine use of scavenging equipment
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N2O Scavenging Developed out of a concern regarding
possible health consequences and psychomotor influences
ADA states that scavenging equipment should be:used to reduce ambient N2Oeffective regardless of heating and air
conditioning system in useable to achieve N2O standards recommended
by NIOSH and OSHA
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Controlling N2O in the Operatory
Monitoring N2O concentrationAir samples from two areas
room air - infrared spectrophotometerworker breathing zone - passive dosimeter
Howard, JADA, March 1997
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Controlling N2O in the Operatory
Engineering controls Inspection
equipment for wear, cracks, tearstest connections
Scavenging systemno system currently accepted by ADAflow rate of 45 L/min vacuum rate
Howard, JADA, March 1997
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Controlling N2O in the Operatory
VentilationFresh air inlets - ceilingReturn air vents - floor levelLocation of ventilation system exhaustAir exchange rate (>10/hr)
Howard, JADA, March 1997
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Controlling N2O in the Operatory
Work Practices Inspect equipment every dayUse scavenging system Instruct patient to refrain from mouth
breathing and talkingBag should collapse and expand as the
patient breathesAfter administration, flush the system
100% O2.Howard, JADA, March 1997
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Howard, JADA, March 1997
Controlling N2O in the Operatory
Maintenance Inspect and test for leaks (soap)Document results of tests and actions
takenAll repairs done by authorized dealers
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N2O Scavenging Factors of scavenging effectiveness
auxilliary evacuation rate of evacuation of scavenging deviceoperatory ventilationuse of air sweep fans reduced concentration of delivered N2Opoor patient behaviorcertain procedures (local anesthesia) improper administration loose connections
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N2O Scavenging - Device
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Preparation of Patient
Patient in reclined position Use TSD Describe sensations in advance
This is how its gonna be, kid...
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Administration of N2O Medical history & vital signs 5 - 6 liters O2 Increase N2O gradually; watch for stages of
analgesia Maintenance about 20 - 40% Reduce N2O with long procedures Record N2O levels in the chart 3 - 5 minute O2 flush Rapid induction (surge) technique
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Administration of N2O
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Complications/Precautions Vomiting - due to:
overdosage prolonged administration pre-existing GI infection, influenza history of motion sickness or vomiting (use anti-
emetic) impurities in the delivery system (rare)
If vomiting occurs, turn patient to the side and use HVE
Prevent vomiting by close observation of patient
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Hallucinations
Complications/Precautions
Always have an assistant present!
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Complications/Precautions
Mild rhinitis or colds are not absolute contraindications
Contraindicated in patients with a depressed respiratory systemchronic emphysema tuberculosismultiple sclerosis remember, N2O will potentiate drugs that
depress the respiratory system
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Complications/Precautions
Contraindicated in patients with blocked eustachian tube, pneumothorax, pneumoperitoneum, and pneumopericardium
Contraindicated in the first trimester of pregnancy
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Complications/Precautions
Other possible contraindications:severe cardiac diseasehyperthyroidismuncontrolled diabetessickle cell anemiasevere asthmatic conditions
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See Ya Next Time….