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Referring to the on-call oral and maxillofacial surgery team – what, when and how to refer emergency conditions Mohammed M Dungarwalla Aamir Vaghela Kenneth J Sneddon Dental Update 2024 46:1, 707-709.
Specialist in Oral Surgery, Institute of Dentistry, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London; Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Royal London Hospital
Primary care dentists are occasionally faced with conditions which cannot be managed in a primary care setting. Some of these conditions may be acute conditions requiring immediate input from the on-call oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS) team and/or emergency medical team. This paper aims to describe the conditions that may present in primary care and outlines their prevention, initial management and the factors which would prompt onward referral to a secondary care setting. A referral proforma is provided which can help clinicians in providing the essential information when speaking to the on-call OMFS team. In this paper, the term ‘immediate’ indicates within hours, whilst the term ‘urgent’ indicates within days.
CPD/Clinical Relevance: To facilitate accurate referrals to the on-call OMFS team by outlining complications which are seen in primary care.
Article
Clinicians have an ethical and legal obligation to communicate effectively with members of the wider team with whom they work. The primary care clinician is occasionally faced with conditions which cannot be managed in a primary care setting and require referral to the on-call OMFS team.1 This paper describes the conditions which require referral to a secondary care setting and provides a referral proforma at the end which clinicians can consult at the time of referral.
For patients who seek care for post-operative discomfort, a thorough history will direct the clinician toward the source of pain. Prolonged pain following extraction should prompt the clinician toward considering a retained root fragment, dry socket, pulpal/peri-apical pathology from adjacent/opposing teeth, osteomyelitis (particularly in immunocompromised patients), infection, or fracture of the alveolar segment. Exposure of root dentine on the distal aspect of mandibular second molars following lower third molar (L3M) removal can result in dentine hypersensitivity.
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