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i need the exact location and tips on how to do it painlessly

2006-07-25 05:28:07 · 6 answers · asked by Dr. Tootha (",) 1 in Health Dental

I am a dental student and i would like to know the exact location where the needle should be, and some tips and hints on how to do it with least pain to the patient.. thanks in advance ! :)

2006-07-25 06:19:49 · update #1

6 answers

please dont' practice on me. I hope for all our sakes that you are just a student and not some weirdo off the street who wants to do dentistry in his backyard.

If you are a dentist already please chuck out your registration and never look at another tooth so I can sleep at night.

....... open wide i'm going to numb you up.... Have i done it before?... well thats not important, i got some instructions off yahoo answers how to do it.

2006-07-25 05:32:37 · answer #1 · answered by BouncingMolar 5 · 0 0

Give a preliminary injection in the approximate location (as taught ad nauseum in any proper dental curriculum, but probably not in Thailand) using Citanest without vasoconstrictor. Try not to nick the periosteum with doing this and inject incrementally as you approach the site. Wait 2 or 3 minutes and follow with the local anesthetic solution of your choice. Go ahead and probe for the bony landmarks now, since it won't hurt the patient. Citanest Plain is pH neutral, so it doesn't burn. The extra volume of solution doesn't hurt, either. Just remember to take into account that this is a 4% solution when you do your toxic levels calculations.

2006-07-25 06:19:30 · answer #2 · answered by Picture Taker 7 · 1 0

Feel the mucobuccal fold in the vestibule and the external and internal oblique ridge and the coronoid notch. Also feel the ramus of the mandible. The inferior alveolar nerve block is given medial to the internal oblique ridge directed from the opposite side premolar until the needle hits the inner ramus of the mandible at the level of the occlusal plane.

2006-07-25 05:39:29 · answer #3 · answered by Riya 2 · 0 0

Um, you don't want to do this. There are too many nerves in your face and if you mess with the wrong ones, you could do some serious damage. Please see a dentist. If you are a dentist, then I'm worried for you.

Good luck.

2006-07-25 05:32:53 · answer #4 · answered by headshrinker 3 · 0 0

swelling can be due to infection. give him antibiotics and pain killer along with seratopeptidiase. tell the patient to avoid pressure on the side. check after 1 week,sometimes the molar roots are near the nerve canal which causes parasthesia. check for DRY SOCKET if the patient is elderly.

2016-03-16 05:14:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

and for the record, painless is not possible.

2006-07-25 05:47:01 · answer #6 · answered by tomh311 4 · 0 0

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