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British dental journal · Dec 2014
Dual anti-platelet therapy and dento-alveolar surgery. How do we manage patients on anti-platelet medication?
- N Patel, V Patel, D Sarkar, T Nokes, and P Blacklock.
- Academic Clinical Fellow in Oral Surgery, The University of Manchester, School of Dentistry, Coupland 3 Building, Coupland Street, Manchester, M13 9PL.
- Br Dent J. 2014 Dec 5; 217 (11): E24.
ObjectiveThe optimum management of dual anti-platelet therapy (DAPT) in patients undergoing dentoalveolar surgery is controversial. The lack of guidelines has meant clinicians have been left to manage these cases from specialist advice or past experience. In view of this the British Association of Oral Surgeons (BAOS) membership was surveyed to assess current practice.DesignAn electronic survey consisting of nine closed multiple-choice questions was circulated to all 435 registered BAOS members. A section for open comments was also included. The data was transcribed, organised and reduced to themes by hand and finally analysed.ResultsOne hundred and eighty members completed the questionnaire giving a response rate of 41%. Ninety-two percent of clinicians had direct involvement in managing patients on DAPT and of these 80% had not encountered a bleeding complication. DAPT was continued for simple dental extraction under local anaesthetic by 83% of respondents and 73% for surgical extractions. Two thirds of the respondents did not follow any guidelines but for those that did the most common was the UK Medicines Information protocols. Only 10% of respondents reported a significant post-operative bleeding complication following surgery in patients on DAPT.ConclusionThis survey confirmed the continued variable management of patients on DAPT undergoing dentoalveolar surgery. Reported bleeding rates were low with over 75% of patients not having their DAPT treatment interrupted.
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