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British dental journal · Nov 2010
Comparative StudyTrigeminal nerve injuries in relation to the local anaesthesia in mandibular injections.
- T Renton, D Adey-Viscuso, J G Meechan, and Z Yilmaz.
- Oral Surgery Department, King's College London Dental Institute, UK. tara.renton@kcl.ac.uk
- Br Dent J. 2010 Nov 1;209(9):E15.
ObjectiveThis study reports the signs and symptoms that are the features of trigeminal nerve injuries caused by local anaesthesia (LA).MethodsThirty-three patients with nerve injury following LA were assessed. All data were analysed using the SPSS statistical programme and Microsoft Excel.ResultsLingual nerve injury (LNI; n = 16) and inferior alveolar nerve injury (IANI; n = 17) patients were studied. LNI were more likely to be permanent. Neuropathy was demonstrable in all patients with varying degrees of paraesthesia, dysaesthesia (in the form of burning pain) allodynia and hyperalgesia. All injuries were unilateral. A significantly greater proportion of LNI patients (75%) had received multiple injections, in comparison to IANI patients (41%) (p <0.05). Fifty percent of patients with LNI reported pain on injection. The presenting signs and symptoms of both LNI and IANI included pain. These symptoms of neuropathy were constant in 88% of the IANI group and in 44% of LNI patients. Functional difficulties were different between the LNI and IANI groups, a key difference being the presence of severely altered taste perception in nine patients with LA-induced LNI.ConclusionsChronic pain is often a symptom after local anaesthetic-induced nerve injury. Patients in the study population with lingual nerve injury were significantly more likely to have received multiple injections compared to those with IANI.
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