Select an Online Manual
THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy
Tips for better results
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ

Section

Subject

Topics

Introduction

Update Me

Emergency dental treatment by a physician is sometimes required when a dentist is unavailable.

Oral analgesics effective for most dental problems include acetaminophen Some Trade Names
GENAPAP
TYLENOL
VALORIN
Click for Drug Monograph
650 to 1000 mg q 6 h and NSAIDs such as ibuprofen Some Trade Names
ADVIL
MOTRIN
NUPRIN
Click for Drug Monograph
400 to 800 mg q 6 h. For severe pain, these drugs may be combined with opioids such as codeine Some Trade Names
No US trade name
Click for Drug Monograph
60 mg; hydrocodone 5 mg, 7.5 mg, or 10 mg; or oxycodone Some Trade Names
OXYCONTIN
OXYIR
Click for Drug Monograph
5 mg.

Antibiotics for dental infections include penicillin VK 500 mg po q 6 h and clindamycin Some Trade Names
CLEOCIN
Click for Drug Monograph
300 mg po q 8 h.

Prophylactic antibiotics: Current American Heart Association guidelines (2007) recommend far fewer people use prophylactic antibiotics for prevention of infective endocarditis (IE—see Endocarditis: Prevention).

Coverage for dental procedures is recommended only for patients with prosthetic cardiac valves, previous IE, specific congenital heart diseases, and for cardiac transplant recipients with heart valve problems (valvulopathy). Dental procedures requiring prophylaxis are those that require manipulation or perforation of gingival or oral mucosa or that involve the root end area of the teeth (ie, those most likely to cause bacteremia). The preferred drug is amoxicillin Some Trade Names
AMOXIL
TRIMOX
Click for Drug Monograph
2 g po 30 to 60 min before the procedure. For those who cannot tolerate penicillins, alternatives include clindamycin Some Trade Names
CLEOCIN
Click for Drug Monograph
600 mg or cephalexin Some Trade Names
KEFLEX
KEFTAB
Click for Drug Monograph
2 g.

Last full review/revision March 2009 by David F. Murchison, DDS, MMS

Content last modified March 2009

Back to Top

Next: Fractured and Avulsed Teeth

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Tables
Videos