26
The Armamentarium 4 PARTS : 1) The Syringe 2) The Needle 3) The Cartridge 4) Preparation

The Armamentarium

  • Upload
    faunus

  • View
    65

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Armamentarium. 4 PARTS : 1) The Syringe 2) The Needle 3) The Cartridge 4) Preparation. The Syringe. Standard of Care  aspirating dental syringes are the standard of care due to their ability to aspirate blood if the tip of the needle is located intravascularly. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Armamentarium

The Armamentarium4 PARTS:

1) The Syringe

2) The Needle

3) The Cartridge

4) Preparation

Page 2: The Armamentarium

The Syringe Standard of Care aspirating dental

syringes are the standard of care due to their ability to aspirate blood if the tip of the needle is located intravascularly

Page 3: The Armamentarium

ADA Standards for Injection Syringes

1.They must be durable and able to withstand repeated sterilization without damage

2. They should be capable of accepting a wide variety of cartridges and needles from different manufacturers and permit repeated use

3. They should be inexpensive, self-contained, lightweight and simple to use with one hand

4. Provide aspiration so blood can be seen through the glass cartridge

Page 4: The Armamentarium
Page 5: The Armamentarium

Breech-Loading, Metallic, Cartridge-Type, Aspirating #1 Used Syringe In Dentistry

-breech loading implies that the dental cartridge is loaded from the side

-a needle is attached to the barrel of the syringe at the needle adaptor

-the needle passes into the barrel and pierces the diaphragm of the local anesthetic cartridge

Page 6: The Armamentarium

Aspirating Syringe -the needle adaptor is sometimes inadvertently

discarded along with the disposable needle

-the harpoon is a sharp tip attached to the piston

and is responsible for penetrating the thick

silicone rubber stopper (bung) at the other end

of the cartridge

Page 7: The Armamentarium

- negative pressure is applied to the thumb ring by the

administrator, if blood enters the glass local anesthetic

cartridge (carpule) then the tip of the needle is

inserted into the lumen of a blood vessel

• chrome-plated brass and stainless steel

Page 8: The Armamentarium

-incidence of positive aspiration is between 10-15% for some injections

-aspiration before injection of local anesthetic is accepted in the practice of dentistry and is overlooked to a great extent

-these syringes use the elasticity of the rubber diaphragm in the anesthetic cartridge to obtain the necessary negative pressure for aspiration

Page 9: The Armamentarium

-multiple aspirations are possible with very little

effort due to a small metal projection that applies

pressure to the rubber diaphragm when the thumb

ring is depressed negative pressure aspiration

-this type of aspiration is as reliable as using the

harpoon to check for blood aspiration

Page 10: The Armamentarium

Self-Aspirating Syringes

-Major factor for aspiration is the gauge of theneedle being used

-Most doctors using the harpoon-type syringe, retract the thumb ring back too far and with excessive force

which frequently disengages the harpoon from thesilicone rubber stopper of the cartridge

Page 11: The Armamentarium

-1st generation self-aspirating syringes required a thumb disk

which forced the operator to remove their index and middle

fingers from the thumb ring to the thumb disk to aspirate

-2nd generation self-aspirating syringes have removed this

thumb disk

-Dentists only need to stop applying pressure to the thumb ring for aspiration; aspiration becomes very easy to do

Page 12: The Armamentarium
Page 13: The Armamentarium
Page 14: The Armamentarium

Pressure Syringes-PDL (intraligamentary) injections make it

possible to achieve single tooth pulpal

anesthesia in the mandible when, in the past,

complete IANB was necessary

Page 15: The Armamentarium

-pressure syringes can allow too easy of an administration of

local anesthetic producing pain and post-operative discomfort

-pressure syringes are expensive > $200.00

-can shatter glass cartridge if too much pressure is applied too

quickly

Page 16: The Armamentarium

2000 psi Jet Syringes ($1,600)

-needle-less injection

-liquids forced through very small openings, called jets, at very high pressure can penetrate skin or intact mucous membrane

-Syrijet is the most popular used today

-Syrijet holds any 1.8 ml cartridge of local anesthetic

Page 17: The Armamentarium

-Syrijet is calibrated to deliver .05 to .2 ml of solution at 2000 psi; traditional syringes deliver 600 psi maximum

-primary use is to obtain topical anesthesia before using a needle

-regional nerve blocks/supraperiosteal injections are still necessary

-topical anesthetics provide the same effect at a fraction of the cost

-patients complain of soreness where the 2000 psi hit their tissue

Page 18: The Armamentarium

Safety Syringe

-Aspiration is possible

-some brands come with an autoclavable plunger and disposable self-contained

injection unit

-all dental safety syringes are made to be single use items

Page 19: The Armamentarium

-sliding the index and middle finger forward against the front collar of the guard makes the needle

“safe” by sliding a protective plastic sheath over the needle tip that locks into place

-more expensive than reusable syringe units

-large disadvantage arises when it comes to re-injecting; complication ensues due to the needle

tips newly acquired safety coping

Page 20: The Armamentarium
Page 21: The Armamentarium

CCLAD (Computer Controlled Local Anesthetic Delivery

-designed to improve ergonomics and precision of injection technique

-foot activated delivery of solution using finger tip precision

-pen-like grasp offers increased tactile sensation

Page 22: The Armamentarium

-flow rates of solution delivery are computer controlled and remain consistent

operator is able to focus attention on the position of the needle tip while the motor of the machine delivers

local anesthetic at a preprogrammed rate of flow

50 Dentists were injected with traditional syringes and The Wand; 48 of 50 Dentists preferred to be injected again themselves with The Wand due to a reported

threefold decrease in the interpretation of pain

The Wand

Page 23: The Armamentarium

-The Wand is less threatening to the patients visually

-allows two rates of delivery:1) Slow: .5 ml/minute2) Fast: 1.8 ml/minute

-releasing the foot rheo-stat will tell the machine to aspirate automatically; the aspiration cycle is

approximately 4.5 seconds

Page 24: The Armamentarium

-extremely high pressure in non-resilient tissues cause (traditional syringe)

moderate/severe pain in most patientsThe Wand eliminates a lot of this

discomfort by maintaining constant pressure delivery of the solution

-less painful PDL, palatal, attached gingiva injections

Page 25: The Armamentarium
Page 26: The Armamentarium

ReferencesMalamed, Stanley: Handbook of Local Anesthesia. 5th Edition. Mosby. 2004