Korean J Anesthesiol.  1997 Oct;33(4):676-680. 10.4097/kjae.1997.33.4.676.

Outpatient General Anesthesia for Mentally and Physically Handicapped Children Undergoing Extensive Dental Treatment

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Fear of dental treatment is a very real problem for many people. Very young patients or children that are mentally or physically handicapped have various problems that preclude routine dental treatment in the office and require general anesthesia for extensive dental restoration. In America, outpatient operations are performed in thousands of dental offices annually, but there is no report about outpatient general anesthesia in Korea. METHOD: A review of forty children treated under outpatient general anesthesia for extensive dental treatment between 1994 and 1996 inclusive was carried out to assess the patient selection, anesthetic method, recovery time and complication.
RESULTS
The mean age was 8.4 years, and twenty-five percent of the patients were autism. The length of the postoperative observation period before discharge was 3.2 hours, and postoperative fever was major complication.
CONCLUSION
For extensive dental treatment in handicapped children, we suggest that outpatient general anesthesia can provide reasonably safe treatment, while reducing its expense and requiring less hospital bed space.

Keyword

Anesthesia, general, outpatient; Surgery, dental

MeSH Terms

Americas
Anesthesia, General*
Autistic Disorder
Child*
Dental Offices
Disabled Children
Disabled Persons*
Fever
Humans
Korea
Outpatients*
Patient Selection
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