Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3137840 The Journal of the American Dental Association 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundPractice guidelines historically have recommended postponing dental care after ischemic vascular events. The authors examined an administrative data set to determine whether dental procedures increased patients' risk of experiencing a second vascular event.MethodsThe authors examined a data set of 50,329 participants in the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey to identify those who had had a vascular event (n = 2,035) and a second event (n = 445) while in the survey. They used Cox proportional hazards regression to study associations between dental procedures performed within 30, 60, 90 or 180 days after a first event and the risk of experiencing a second vascular event.ResultsDental procedures of any kind, and invasive procedures considered separately, were not associated with patients' risk of experiencing second vascular events across all periods examined. Most hazard ratios associated with dental procedures were less than 1.0, although none differed significantly from 1.0.ConclusionsThe authors found that community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries who underwent dental procedures within 30 to 180 days after an ischemic vascular event, including those that produce a bacteremia consistently, were not at an increased risk of experiencing a second event.Clinical ImplicationsThe results of this study suggest that clinicians should reassess historical recommendations that dental care in this population be postponed for as long as six months after an ischemic vascular event.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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