Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3135214 International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fifty-four injection injuries in 52 patients were caused by mandibular block analgesia affecting the lingual nerve (n = 42) and/or the inferior alveolar nerve (n = 12). All patients were examined with a standardized test of neurosensory functions. The perception of the following stimuli was assessed: feather light touch, pinprick, sharp/dull discrimination, warm, cold, point location, brush stroke direction, 2-point discrimination and pain perception. Gustation was tested for recognition of sweet, salt, sour and bitter.Mandibular block analgesia causes lingual nerve injury more frequently than inferior alveolar nerve injury. All grades of loss of neurosensory and gustatory functions were found, and a range of persisting neurogenic malfunctions was reported. Subjective complaints and neurosensory function tests indicate that lingual nerve lesions are more incapacitating than inferior alveolar nerve lesions.Unlike most mechanical injuries after surgery, injection injuries were not followed by a course of spontaneous improvement of neurosensory and/or gustatory function. This may indicate neurotoxicity as a central aetiological factor. Fifty-four percent of the nerve injuries were associated with Articaine 4%, and a substantial increase in the number of injection injuries followed its introduction to the Danish market.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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