| Literature DB >> 34066174 |
Trishnika Chakraborty1,2, Rizwana Fathima Jamal3, Gopi Battineni4, Kavalipurapu Venkata Teja5, Carlos Miguel Marto6,7,8,9, Gianrico Spagnuolo10,11.
Abstract
The available data regarding the short and long-term consequences of COVID-19 is still insufficient. This narrative review aims to provide information on the prolonged COVID-19 symptoms in recovered patients and their implications during dental management. Additionally, this manuscript highlights the oral manifestations of COVID-19 and its management. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library and Web of Science databases, WHO and CDC websites, and grey literature was searched through Google Scholar. Clinical articles (clinical trials, case-reports, cohort, and cross-sectional studies) were included, reporting prolonged post-COVID-19 symptoms. Although COVID-19 is an infectious disease primarily affecting the lungs, its multi-organ involvement is responsible for several prolonged symptoms, including oral implications. In recovered patients with prolonged COVID-19 symptoms, considerations for providing dental treatment has to be made as they can present with assortment of symptoms. These prolonged post-COVID-19 symptoms can affect the delivery of the required dental treatment. Hence, the recommendations proposed in this narrative review can be a useful starting point to aid dental teams providing adequate care for such recovered patients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 dental; COVID-19 recovered; long-COVID; post-COVID-19 syndrome; prolonged COVID symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066174 PMCID: PMC8151698 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of the study selection.
Summary findings of prolonged post-COVID-19 symptoms.
| Author and Year | Sample | Study Type | Prolonged Symptoms of COVID-19 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carfi et al., 2020 [ | 143 | Case Series |
Most common symptoms including fatigue, dyspnoea, joint pain, chest pain, cough, anosmia. Less common symptoms include Sicca syndrome, rhinitis, dysgeusia, headache, sputum production, vertigo, loss of appetite, sore throat, myalgia, diarrhea. |
| C D Rio et al., 2020 [ | 292 | Cross sectional |
Cardiovascular: Myocardial inflammation and myocarditis, and cardiac arrhythmias. Pulmonary: Interstitial thickening and fibrosis, decreased diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide, abnormalities in pulmonary function test, decreased diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide, and diminished respiratory muscle strength. Neurologic: Headache, vertigo, and chemosensory dysfunction, stroke, encephalitis, seizures, mood swings, and brain fog. Emotional health and well-being feelings of isolation and loneliness, COVID-19–related stigma, lingering malaise and exhaustion akin to chronic fatigue syndrome, depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and substance use disorder. |
| E Garrigues et al., 2020 [ | 120 | Cross sectional | Fatigue, dyspnoea, loss of memory, concentration and sleep disorders, ageusia, anosmia, hair loss, memory loss. |
| Halpin et al., 2020 [ | 100 | Cross sectional | Fatigue, breathlessness, persistent cough, concentration problems, post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), voice changes, anxiety, depression, continence problems, memory problems, dysphagia. |
| Koumpa et al., 2020 [ | 45-year-old patient | Case report | Sudden onset sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL). |
| Moreno-Perez et al., 2021 [ | 277 | Cohort study | Fatigue, dyspnoea, anosmia, amnesic complaints, cough, dysgeusia, headache. |
| Amorim dos Santos et al., 2020 [ | 77-year-old male patient | Case report | Fungus infection, Herpetic recurrent oral lesion, Fibroma and geographic tongue as a result of COVID-19 specific treatment. |
| R Perrin et al., 2020 [ | 42-year-old male patient | Case report | CFS/ME symptomatology such as persistent fatigue, diffuse myalgia, depressive symptoms, and non-restorative sleep. |
| A Sardasi et al., 2020 [ | 31-year-old patient | Case report | Myocarditis due to residual myocardial inflammation. |
| Wang et al., 2020 [ | 131 | Cohort study | Cough, fatigue, expectoration, chest tightness, dyspnoea, chest pain, dizziness, palpitation. Other rare symptoms, including pharyngeal pain, nausea, inappetence and vomiting. |
| Weerahandi et al., 2021 [ | 161 | Cohort Study | Dyspnoea, altered mental status. |
The impact of COVID-19 in dental management.
| Author and Year | Sample | Study Type | COVID-19 Impact on Dental Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Samara et al., 2021 [ | 11 | Cross-sectional | The number of hospital admissions for cervicofacial infections decreased by 35% during the COVID-19 pandemic when dental practices were closed. |
| Petrescu et al., 2020 [ | 884 | Cross-sectional | Acute apical periodontitis (42.3%), acute pulpitis (33.3%), and cellulitis/abscess (9.3%) were the most frequent diagnosis. |
| Kateeb et al., 2021 [ | 488 | Cross-sectional | Almost 13% reported a lack of confidence in dealing with patients with COVID-19, while 64% had “little to moderate” confidence. |
| Lee et al., 2021 [ | 6681 medical visits | Cohort | The highest reduction in ambulatory medical visits was at clinics, while the most severe dental visits reduction was at hospitals. |
Figure 2Summary of prolonged post-COVID-19 symptoms in recovered patients.
Suggested health assessments and dental setting guidelines for the treatment of COVID-19 patients.
| Dental Care Phases | Suggested Evaluation and Dental Setting Guidelines |
|---|---|
| Primary Teledentisty Examination | Ask the patient to upload intra oral pictures in different perspectives using phone camera and tablespoons in the SmileMate |
| Ask for the medical and medication history | |
| Ask the patient about the past and present signs and symptoms of COVID-19 | |
| Ask the patient about the treatment received for COVID-19 (supplemental oxygen, antibiotics, anti-retroviral, HCQ, immunomodulators) | |
| Check the past diagnostic reports of COVID-19 | |
| Share the comprehensive dental report based on Online dental screening software (SmileMate) with the patient | |
| Patient counselling and treatment recommendation should be advised | |
| Comprehensive COVID-19 post-acute assessment | Oxygen saturation, Heart rate, Blood pressure assessment |
| Lifestyle assessment (physical activity, diet, alcohol consumption) | |
| Ask for gastrointestinal symptoms | |
| Physical perfomance test (6 min walking, hand grip and chair side stand) for the elderly patients | |
| Psychiatric history and quality or life assessment | |
| Dental facility considerations for COVID-19 recovered patient | The appointments for the patients who have persistent symptoms should be preplanned (either first or the last appointment) |
| Shorter waiting time | |
| Mandatory use of facemasks in the waiting room | |
| Waiting area should allow social distancing (6-feet/2 m) apart | |
| Provision for tissue paper dispenser and foot operated waster bin | |
| Use of HEPA filters in dental care facilities with commercial split and centralized/window Acs | |
| Proper ventilated dental operatory rooms | |
| Administer frequent disinfection of touched surfaces with NaOCl and ethanol | |
| Disinfecting the floors or the operatory room with 1000 mg/L chlorine | |
| ’Critical’ heat sensitive instruments should de disinfected with 2 %glutaraldehyde | |
| Waste disposal in accordance to the CDC guidelines | |
| Dental radiography | Extraoral radiography (panoramic radiography or cone-beam CT) |
| Succesive follow-ups | Providing the patient with cheek-retractors |
| Regular follow-ups by using oral health assessment forms or SmileMate monitoring |
Clinical considerations of post-COVID-19 patients and suggested dental management.
| Clinical Consideration | Clinical Condition/Situation | Suggested Dental Recommendations and Management |
|---|---|---|
| Respiratory | Breathlessness | Periodic recording of oxygen saturation for a week by the patient prior to treatment |
| Continous monitoring of oxygen saturation by "pulse oximeter" during the treatment | ||
| Practice and train breathing techniques (inspiration to expiration ratio of 1:2) | ||
| Bilateral mandibular blocks should not be administered | ||
| Clinics must include medical emergency first aid kits (oxygen cylinders) | ||
| Cough | Practice and train breathing techniques (inspiration to expiration ratio of 1:2) | |
| Antitussives or lozenges for immediate cough suppression. | ||
| Chair position during the treatment: Upright or semi supine position | ||
| Psychosocial | Fear in COVID-19 recovered pts. | Virtual consultations using AI based patient management screening tools |
| Fear and Anxiety in COVID-19 recovered pts | Appointments to be scheduled after complete health assessment | |
| Family members should also accompany during the appointment. | ||
| First or last time slot should be scheduled | ||
| Screen the patients using "The Seattle System for anxiety and fear | ||
| To be treated with utmost care and empathy | ||
| Stress in COVID-19 recovered pts. | Psychotherapeutic interventions can be used | |
| Fear in Dentists | Learning about the virus and post-COVID symptoms | |
| Oral health | Inflammatory reactions (salivary glands, tongue) | Dental follow-ups of recovered patients |
| Pain | Acetaminophen (not exceeding 60 mg/kg/day or 3 mg/day) | |
| Periodontal | Oral health hygiene training (online, if necessary) | |
| Regular online follow ups (patient management software can be used) | ||
| Musco-skeletal | Associated sleeplessness and anxiety | Non-pharmacological (3 ps Technique by RCOT) |
| Pharmacological interventions (tranquilizers, muscle relaxants or anxiolytics) | ||
| Fatigue | Pre-planning the treatment | |
| Short appointments and relaxing setting | ||
| Bleeding disorders | Active Bleeding | ASH guidelines for controlling bleeding (who are not under thromboprophylaxis) |
| Bleeding disorders | Pain | Acetaminophen (not exceeding 60 mg/kg/day or 3 mg/day) |
| (Hypercoagulability thromboembolic disorders/Congenital Bleeding Diathesis) cardiac Damages (Stress cardiomyopathy) | Pain due to Irreversible Pulpitis/necrosis | Endodontic treatment should be considered over extraction |
| Endodontic consideration: Copious irrigation with sodium hypochlorite sol. | ||
| Endodontic consideration: lntracanal dressing to limit the bleeding from canals | ||
| Surgical consideration: Short appointments | ||
| Safe anaesthsia: Infiltration from the vestibule side of the mouth | ||
| Surgical consideration: Resorbable sutures and haemostatic agent to be used | ||
| Instruction to patient.: Maintain a pressure tampon for 1–2 h after extraction |