| Literature DB >> 31723666 |
Jane R Schubart1,2,3, Eric Schaefer2, Piotr Janicki4, Sanjib D Adhikary4, Amber Schilling1, Alan J Hakim5, Rebecca Bascom2,3, Clair A Francomano6, Satish R Raj7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People with the Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS), a group of heritable disorders of connective tissue, often report experiencing dental procedure pain despite local anesthetic (LA) use. Clinicians have been uncertain how to interpret this apparent LA resistance, as comparison of EDS and non-EDS patient experience is limited to anecdotal evidence and small case series. The primary goal of this hypothesis-generating study was to investigate the recalled adequacy of pain prevention with LA administered during dental procedures in a large cohort of people with and without EDS. A secondary exploratory aim asked people with EDS to recall comparative LA experiences.Entities:
Keywords: Dental Care; Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome; Local Anesthetics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31723666 PMCID: PMC6834718 DOI: 10.17245/jdapm.2019.19.5.261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Anesth Pain Med ISSN: 2383-9309
Demographic characteristics of survey responders, stratified by EDS status
| No EDS (n = 255) | EDS reported (n = 988) | Total (n = 1243) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (in years)* | |||
| Mean (SD) | 41.5 (13.9) | 39.1 (12.8) | 39.5 (13.0) |
| Range | (17-89) | (8-78) | (8-89) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 50 (19.6%) | 44 (4.5%) | 94 (7.6%) |
| Female | 205 (80.4%) | 938 (94.9%) | 1143 (92.0%) |
| Other or prefer not to say | 0 (0%) | 6 (0.6%) | 6 (0.5%) |
| Race | |||
| White | 237 (92.9%) | 898 (90.9%) | 1135 (91.3%) |
| Black | 3 (1.2%) | 3 (0.3%) | 6 (0.5%) |
| Multiple | 6 (2.4%) | 50 (5.1%) | 56 (4.5%) |
| Other | 4 (2.0%) | 25 (2.5%) | 29 (2.3%) |
| Prefer not to say | 4 (1.6%) | 12 (1.2%) | 16 (1.3%) |
| Ethnicity | |||
| Hispanic | 8 (3.1%) | 25 (2.5%) | 33 (2.7%) |
| Non-Hispanic | 238 (93.3%) | 927 (93.8%) | 1165 (93.7%) |
| Prefer not to say | 9 (3.5%) | 36 (3.6%) | 45 (3.6%) |
| Country† | |||
| Australia | 2 (1.2%) | 47 (5%) | 49 (4.5%) |
| Canada | 11 (6.6%) | 52 (5.6%) | 63 (5.7%) |
| Great Britain | 10 (6%) | 106 (11.3%) | 116 (10.5%) |
| United States | 131 (78.4%) | 668 (71.5%) | 799 (72.6%) |
| Other | 13 (6.6%) | 61 (6.5%) | 74 (6.7%) |
*Question was not completed by 23 respondents. †Question was not completed by 142 respondents.
Use of local anesthetics, stratified by EDS status
| No EDS (n = 255) | EDS reported (n = 988) | Total (n = 1243) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Have you ever received a local anesthetic injection for a minor surgical or dental procedure? = YES | 249 | 980 | 1229 |
| Have you ever had a problem with a local anesthetic injection not working adequately or properly? = YES | 83 / 249 (33.3%) | 860 / 980 (87.8%) | 943 / 1229 (76.7%) |
Survey responses for the EDS cohort who reported ever having received a local anesthetic injection (n = 980)
| Local Anesthetic Name* | Ever Received this Anesthetic (n) | Adequate Pain Relief (n) | Anesthetic provided adequate pain relief? (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lidocaine | 676 | 55 | 8.1% |
| Procaine | 623 | 44 | 7.1% |
| Bupivacaine | 169 | 43 | 25.4% |
| Mepivacaine | 50 | 11 | 22.0% |
| Articaine | 40 | 12 | 30.0% |
| No specified LAs | 92 | 20 | 21.7% |
*Drug categories are not mutually exclusive; patients could have reported have receiving ≥ 1 agent.
Survey responses for the EDS cohort who reported ever having received a local anesthetic injection (n = 980)*
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Procaine and lidocaine | n = 501 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 15 (3%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 432 (86.2%) |
| Procaine adequate, lidocaine inadequate | 22 (4.4%) |
| Procaine inadequate, lidocaine adequate | 32 (6.4%) |
| Procaine and bupivacaine | n = 132 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 6 (4.5%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 91 (68.9%) |
| Procaine adequate, bupivacaine inadequate | 4 (3%) |
| Procaine inadequate, bupivacaine adequate | 31 (23.5%) |
| Procaine and mepivacaine | n = 34 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 3 (8.8%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 24 (70.6%) |
| Procaine adequate, mepivacaine inadequate | 1 (2.9%) |
| Procaine inadequate, mepivacaine adequate | 6 (17.6%) |
| Lidocaine and bupivacaine | n = 146 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 9 (6.2%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 101 (69.2%) |
| Lidocaine adequate, bupivacaine inadequate | 4 (2.7%) |
| Lidocaine inadequate, bupivacaine adequate | 32 (21.9%) |
| Lidocaine and mepivacaine | n = 22 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 1 (4.5%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 18 (81.8%) |
| Lidocaine adequate, mepivacaine inadequate | 2 (9.1%) |
| Lidocaine inadequate, mepivacaine adequate | 1 (4.5%) |
| Bupivacaine and mepivacaine | n = 24 |
| Both provided adequate pain control | 3 (12.5%) |
| Neither provided adequate pain control | 19 (79.2%) |
| Bupivacaine adequate, mepivacaine inadequate | 1 (4.2%) |
| Bupivacaine inadequate, mepivacaine adequate | 1 (4.2%) |
*Respondents who indicated “unsure” or “do not want to say” in reference to the comparison were excluded. †Drug categories are not mutually exclusive; patients could have reported have receiving ≥ 1 agent