Abstract

IntroductionEmergency physicians should be cognizant of complications following common procedures (including dental) and be able to readily care for patients with acute dental pain.Case ReportA 22-year-old female presented with dental pain and difficulty swallowing that developed 48 hours after she underwent a dental extraction. The physical exam showed an uncomfortable, afebrile female with dysphonia, inability to tolerate secretions, and crepitus over the neck and anterior chest wall.DiscussionThe use of a high-speed dental drill may have caused air to dissect through fascial planes leading to subcutaneous emphysema, or even through deeper planes resulting in pneumomediastinum. It should be noted that subcutaneous emphysema and pneumomediastinum are rare complications of dental procedures.ConclusionThis case highlights an uncommon but potentially life-threatening complication following a routine dental procedure, which emergency clinicians should be attentive to and able to identify and thereby manage.

Highlights

  • IntroductionEmergency physicians should be cognizant of complications following common procedures (including dental) and be able to readily care for patients with acute dental pain

  • Emergency physicians should be cognizant of complications following common procedures and be able to readily care for patients with acute dental pain.Case Report: A 22-year-old female presented with dental pain and difficulty swallowing that developed 48 hours after she underwent a dental extraction

  • The use of a high-speed dental drill may have caused air to dissect through fascial planes leading to subcutaneous emphysema, or even through deeper planes resulting in pneumomediastinum

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Emergency physicians should be cognizant of complications following common procedures (including dental) and be able to readily care for patients with acute dental pain. Case Report: A 22-year-old female presented with dental pain and difficulty swallowing that developed 48 hours after she underwent a dental extraction. The physical exam showed an uncomfortable, afebrile female with dysphonia, inability to tolerate secretions, and crepitus over the neck and anterior chest wall

Discussion
Conclusion
INTRODUCTION
Findings
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call