British dental journal
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As an organisation whose function is to protect the public, the General Dental Council's role in investigating complaints about dentists and dental care professionals dealing suitably with those who have been shown to practise in an unprofessional or dangerous manner is obviously of paramount importance. This article looks at the GDC's fitness to practise procedures - the system that looks into complaints and allegations of malpractice about dental practitioners. It outlines the different stages in the process and introduces some of the many people involved with the efficient running of this vital service.
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British dental journal · Jul 2008
Randomized Controlled TrialPain behaviour and distress in children during two sequential dental visits: comparing a computerised anaesthesia delivery system and a traditional syringe.
To compare the pain and distress response of children receiving a local anesthesia injection using a computerised device (Wand) or a traditional syringe over two consecutive treatment sessions and to study whether the response to the two injection techniques was different for high or low dentally anxious children. ⋯ No clear difference in the response of referred children could be found between an injection with the Wand or the traditional syringe. Level of dental anxiety was found to be an important factor in the response of children to a local anaesthesia injection.
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British dental journal · Jul 2008
Case ReportsCase report: foreign body in the palate of an infant.
Most foreign body aspirations occur in children younger than five years old, with 65% of deaths affecting infants younger than one year. A reasonably uncommon eventuality is attachment and retention of the foreign body to the oral mucosal tissues and in particular to the soft tissues of the hard palate. The following report discusses the unusual presentation of a foreign body in the palate of a child as well as the treatment carried out to facilitate the removal of the object. This report aims to highlight the importance of considering an impacted foreign body in the differential diagnosis of a palatal mass in an infant.