Oral health care for a child with the diagnosis of autism is not much different from the oral health care of other children. However, children with autism often have difficulty in communication skills, so cooperation from your child might be a difficult challenge when visiting the dentist. For parents of children with autism, a visit to the dentist is more than a child opening his or her mouth and getting a reward after. If your child is too difficult to work with and the need for a dental procedure is urgent enough, a dentist may have no choice but to use dental sedation in order to perform his job.
What is dental sedation? Is it necessary? Is it safe?
Sedation is the utilization of medications called "sedatives" to create a state of relaxation. It is usually done to facilitate a medical, or in this case, dental procedure. There are three levels of sedation that may be used with pediatric patients that require extensive dental care:
-Conscious sedation is inducing a minimally depressed level of consciousness that retains the patient's ability to maintain an open airway independently and continuously and respond appropriately to physical stimulation or verbal commands.
-Deep sedation is a type of sedation in which the patient is not easily aroused and which may be accompanied by a partial loss of protective reflexes, including the ability to maintain an airway or to respond properly to physical stimulation or verbal commands.
-General anesthesia is an induced state of unconsciousness. The patient cannot respond to physical or verbal stimulation of any kind and it will be up to the dentist to insure that an airway is maintained.
Most people immediately associate sedation with general anesthesia, in which the patient is put to sleep during the whole procedure and awakens afterward in a recovery room. However this is normally the last possible choice for a pediatric dentist. He will recommend a lower level of sedation instead if he can, trying to use whichever form of anesthesia has the lowest risk while being effective. To make his decision he will take the child's age, cognitive level, coping and communication skills, physical health, the attitude of the parents toward anesthesia and the urgency of the procedure into consideration.
Although the decision regarding which level of sedation to be used on your child must ultimately be made by the dentist, you as the parent should always have a say in the matter. If you are not comfortable with the suggestion of your dentist, make sure that your concerns about it are heard. To help you further understand the decision the dentist will be making, here are some guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAPD) that the dentist will be using in making his recommendation: (American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, 2010)
The AAPD recommends conscious sedation for:
-Preschool children who cannot understand or cooperate for definitive treatment
-Patients requiring dental care who cannot cooperate due to lack of psychological or emotional maturity
-Patients requiring dental treatment who cannot cooperate due to a cognitive, physical or medical disability
-Patients who require dental care but are fearful and anxious and cannot cooperate for Treatment
The AAPD recommends deep sedation or general anesthesia for:
-Patients with certain physical, mental or medically compromising conditions
-Patients with dental restorative or surgical needs for whom local anesthesia is ineffective
-The extremely uncooperative, fearful, anxious or physically resistant child or adolescent with substantial dental needs and no expectation that the behavior will improve soon
-Patients who have sustained extensive orofacial or dental trauma Patients with dental needs who otherwise would not receive comprehensive dental care
Sedation Procedure
Dental Sedations are usually done in an outpatient dental clinic that is well-equipped. The whole procedure usually won't take more than 90 minutes for most procedures. Although some details vary depending on the dentist's practice among other things, in general the process will go like this:
-Initial assessment of the pediatric dentist and scheduling of the actual procedure.
-Consent signing by the parents
-Guidelines are given prior to the procedure - your child will be asked to go on a NPO (nothing per orem or mouth) diet 6-8 hours before the procedure. This is a standard operating procedure for any sedation process. It will aid in the proper ventilation of your child and will avoid any episodes of vomiting after the procedure is done.
-Sedation medication is introduced via injection, an IV line, rectal line (just like when you give suppositories for fever), orally or thru inhalation.
-Dental procedures are done. Your child may or may not be strapped onto a papoose board. Papoose boards restrain the child's limbs and help in stabilizing your child during the procedure. Oxygen and pulse oximeters should be available and used if the need arises.
-Monitoring of the patient until sedative wears off.
Safety of Sedation
Sedation is an accepted standard of care. The 3 levels of sedation are all accepted and supported by the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, the American Dental Association, the American Medical Association, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Pediatrics dentists are also trained and certified to perform sedation as part of their profession. Usually, dentists who specialize in treating pediatric patients are also well equipped to handle children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Reference:
American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. (2010). Reference Manual 2010-2011. Chicago, IL: American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry.
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