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Flashcards in Cellulitis Deck (32)
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1
Q

what % of all hospital ER visits are dental related?

A

1%

*cost = 760$

2
Q

how many deaths occur due to acute oral conditions each year?

A

more than 30 deaths / year

3
Q

dental infections that spread to surrounding tissues

A

odontogenic infections

4
Q

when periapical infections spread to surrounding tissues, the usual course is a initial ____

A

cellulitis (tissue invasion)

*areas of necrosis and abscess in tissues may form secondary to cellulitis

5
Q

an early stage endo infection where the pulp is compormised by inflammation and the extent of bacterial growth is unclear

A

pulpitis

*can be reversed if treated early

6
Q

what are the early stage symptoms for pulpitis?

A
  • lowered threshold and prolonged pain response to cold

* onset of spontaneous pain signals shift to irreversible status and eventual necrosis

7
Q

what is the significance of the inflammatory response of periapical lesions

A

bone resporption takes place, allows space for inflammatory cells to accumulate and prevent spread of disease

8
Q

are periapical lesions symptomatic?

A

no, bc the pulp is necrotic

9
Q

acute exacerbation of periapical lesion, shift in bacterial species toward immune response.
painful and tooth is sensitive to pressure, drainage brings relief

A

acute dentoalveolar (periapical) abscess

10
Q

how serious is the drainage of an acute dentoalveolar (periapical) abscess to the tissue spaces

A

very serious since it leads to orofacial involvement

11
Q

what are dental infections that spread to surrounding tissues called?

A

odontogenic infections

12
Q

in cellulitis, how does infection spread?

A

through soft tissue via vascular channels or direct autolysis of tissue

13
Q

what are the symptoms of cellulitis?

A
  • edema (hard tissues)
  • erythema (warm and red)
  • painful
  • fever
14
Q

differential dx of odontogenic facial cellulitis

A
  • bacteria from tooth

- alpha strep

15
Q

differential dx of nonodontogenic facial cellulitis

A
  • skin or mucous membrane trauma
  • sinus bacteria
  • H. influenza
  • Hb vaccine lowered incidence
16
Q

where are odontogenic lesions usually found?

A

lower face

17
Q

where are nonodontogenic lesions found?

A

upper face

18
Q

what might progressing cellulitis lead to?

A

progress to soft tissue abscesses

-may proceed to a 2nd phase of new abscess formation

19
Q

how is the only way to resolve a soft tissue abscess?

A

must have drainage
-intra or extra oral

intra oral is preferreable

20
Q

what is the most frequently isolated bacteria in odontogenic facial celluli

A

alpha-hemolytic

21
Q

what are the two types of DEFINITIVE tx for pulpal and periapical diseases?

A
  • extraction of teeth

- RCT

22
Q

what is the tx of cellulitis?

A
  • temporarily managed with antibiotic therapy
  • resolve quickly if source of infection is removed
  • may require antibiotics even after ext of tooth
23
Q

what is the tx of soft tissue abscess

A

if tooth ext or root canal therapy does not provide a path of drainage for abscess, must have surgical drainage for resolution

24
Q

what antibiotic has less frequent dosage schedule and better taste?

A

amox

25
Q

what antibiotic has a broad spectrum?

A

metronidazole bc kills anaerobes

26
Q

what antibiotic is bacteriostatic?

A

clindamycin

27
Q

what are the red flags of cellulitis?

A
  • elevation of the tongue/floor of mouth
  • respiratory distress
  • drooling
  • rapid pulse
  • toxic appearance
  • peri-orbital involvement
28
Q

typically presenting with drooling, elevation of floor of mouth, difficulty swallowing, difficulty breathing, limited neck range of motion
CAN BE LIFE THREATENING

A

ludwig’s angina

29
Q
  • also called “pre-septal cellulitis”
  • erythema, induration, tenderness of periobital tissues
  • rarely progress to orbital cellulitis

*more common in children, bulging eyes, loss of vision, pain in eye, brain abscess

A

periobrital cellulitis

30
Q

what are the indicators of urgency?

A
  • rapid onset (overnights vs days)
  • fever
  • pain levels (cant eat/drink)
  • prior tx (antibiotics failed)
31
Q

what is the mean hosptial stay for Nationwide ?

A

2 days (4 days nationally)

32
Q

what are the reasons to defer definitive tx and give antibiotic?

A
  • hospital admission

- general anesthesia required