White Zin said:
Questions for OMFS residents:
Do you ever worry about hurting someone? Sometimes in the dentoalveolar surgeries (and orthers) ppl can get permanent nerve damage. Do you feel that this happens mostly as a result of negligence? Or is it something that happens unexpectedly? I'm interested in OMFS, but I don't know if I could live with myself if a surgery went awry and I caused permanent numbness. How often does this happen? I'd be intereested in what you think.
IAN paraesthesia on 3rd extractions is between 1-3% and lingual nerve damage is 0.5-1% depending on the literature you read. It happens and is not always avoidable. For negligence to have occured you have to grossly violate the standard of care. ie lingual approach to 3rd (unless you live in the UK), cutting the nerve with the burr, putting an implant or sargenti paste into the IAN canal. If you have SIGNED informed consent and follow standard protocol you should be fine legally.
A great example of negligence: A general dentist in the city I reside recently had a patient sent to our hospital for an air ephesema while trying to surgically extract a tooth with a highspeed handpiece. That is an indefensible malpractice suit and gross negligence as the dentist should have used a surgical handpiece or striker that doesnt blow air into the surgical site.
If you are a general dentist doing 3rds, it is good to always offer referal to a specialist. In my experience , most patients will decline a referal to an oral surgeon based on the price difference. Post-op follow-up appointments and communication is key.
I've extracted alot of impacted 3rds under local in private practice while moonlighting. Patients tend to be reasonable if you are upfront and discuss complications beforehand.
Also be sure to document your diagnosis and reason for extracting, partial exposure, history of pericoronitis etc. Do not do stuff beyond your skill, or that is high risk of nerve damage and elective. ie a distoangular #32 with 5mm bone coronally with obvious nerve involvement (discontinuity of the canal on the pano) that is asymptomatic.
I've had a few paraesthias that have resolved. If you have a paraesthia, follow the patient and know when to refer to a microneurosurgeon... (ie 3 months)
Finally, if you are worried about hurting patients and things going awry, you need to reconsider your career choice. You can do alot of things in general dentistry, or any medical field for that matter, that can potentially harm a patient. You can give a patient a paraethesia from local anesthesia, bag someones IAN nerve with endo, give someone a malocclusion and TMD, put someone into anaphalactic shock from an antibiotic perscription.