| Literature DB >> 29204220 |
T Lillis1, M Didagelos2, L Lillis2, C Theodoridis1, H Karvounis2, A Ziakas2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exodontia (dental extraction), being the most frequent minor surgical procedure in the general population, inevitably involves a large number of patients on antithrombotic medication. Current experience shows that there is a degree of confusion in managing these patients. DESCRIPTION: Post-exodontia bleeding, a natural consequence of every dental extraction with no or minor clinical significance in the vast majority of cases, often appears to be of major concern to both patients and healthcare practitioners (dentists or physicians), either because of the alarming nature of oral bleeding itself or because of the distorted perception about its importance. These concerns are enhanced by the lack of a universal standardized definition of post-exodontia bleeding and by the fact that all currently available post-exodontia bleeding definitions bear intrinsic limitations and tend to overestimate its clinical significance.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulant; Antiplatelet; Bleeding; Classification; Dental extraction
Year: 2017 PMID: 29204220 PMCID: PMC5688390 DOI: 10.2174/1874192401711010102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Cardiovasc Med J ISSN: 1874-1924
Some classifications proposed for post-exodontia bleeding severity in patients on antithrombotic medication.
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| Ardekian | Mild: Blood loss <20 ml |
| Madan | Severe: Blood loss >30 ml |
| Vicente-Barrero | Mild: Bleeding time <5 min |
| Krishnan | Severe: Bleeding 30 min after pressure pack applied |
| Morimoto | Severe: Bleeding 30 min after pressure pack applied |
| Nooh 2009 | Severe: Bleeding 30 min after pressure pack applied |
| Cardona-Tortajada | Severe: Bleeding 10 min after pressure pack applied |
| Al-Belasy | Mild: Bleeding time <20 min after pressure pack applied |
| Lockhart | Clinically significant: |
Classification proposal for post-exodontia bleeding.
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| *Corrected for transfusion (1 U packed red blood cells or 1 U whole blood expected to increase haemoglobin by 1 g/dL). |