Management of the spread of infection Flashcards

1
Q

What are examples of bacterial odontogenic infections?

A
  • caries
  • peri-apical periodontitis —> abscess
  • periodontisis
  • pericoronitis
  • osteomyelitis (bone infection, man. > max.)
  • maxillary sinusitis
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2
Q

What does sequelae of infection depend on?

A
  • virulence of the organism involved
  • host resistance to infection (local and systemic)
  • local anatomy
  • treatment of infection
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3
Q

What is an example of reduced local resistance to infection in the head/neck?

A

after radiotherapy, vasculature to area reduced

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4
Q

Why can antibiotics not effectively treat odontogenic infection?

A

can’t reach the inside of the tooth due to lack of vascular supply

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5
Q

What areas can maxillary odontogenic infection spread to?

A
  • buccal sulcus (relatively short buccal root, apex below muscle attachment)
  • buccal space (relatively long buccal root, apex above the muscle attachment)
  • maxillary antrum (apex close to antrum)
  • nasal passage (apex close to nose)
  • palatal (root closer to palatal shelf)
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6
Q

What areas can mandibular odontogenic infection spread to?

A
  • buccal sulcus (relatively short buccal root, apex above muscle attachment
  • submandibular space (relatively long root, apex below muscle attachment)
  • sublingual space (relatively short lingual root, apex above muscle attachment
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7
Q

If a pt present with a swelling on the buccal gingiva/sulcus, what does that tell you about the anatomy of the tooth?

A

root relatively short and above buccinator muscle attachment, root closer to buccal plate than lingual plate

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8
Q

What is cellulitis?

A

diffuse inflammation of the soft tissues which is not circumscribed or confined to one area but tends to spread through tissue spaces along fascial planes

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9
Q

Why does cellulitis encourage spread of infections?

A

opens up fascial planes allowing bacteria spread more freely

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10
Q

In cellulitis, why is it particularly worrying to see peri-orbital oedema?

A

could potentially spread to cavernous sinus and cause cavernous sinus thrombosis

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11
Q

What can spread of infection around the laryngeal inlet cause?

A

asphyxia

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12
Q

What is Ludwig’s angina?

A
  • severe cellulitis
  • bilateral involvement of the submandibular, submental, sublingual and parapharyngeal and retropharyngeal spaces - rapid, board like swelling of FOM, elevation of tongue, dysphagia, dysarthria, trismus
  • glottal oedema - can lead to asphyxia
  • can lead to mediastinitis
  • anaesthetic emergency to secure airway before it is lost
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13
Q

What effect on the eyes may cavernous sinus thrombosis have?

A
  • difficulty in moving eyes
  • build up of pressure behind the eye —> proptosis
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14
Q

What is sepsis?

A

life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection

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15
Q

What are the possible symptoms of sepsis?

A
  • slurred speech
  • extreme shivering
  • passed no urine in a day
  • severe breathlessness
  • illness so bad they feel they’re dying
  • skin mottled/discoloured/ashen
  • rash doesn’t blanch with pressure
  • cyanosis of lip/skin/tongue
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16
Q

What are the signs of sepsis?

A
  • temp >38 or <36
  • HR >90
  • RR > 20
  • WCC >12 or <4
  • BP systolic <100
17
Q

How is sepsis managed?

A
  • Take blood cultures ideally before antibiotics
  • Take serum lactate >2mmol/l
  • Give oxygen
  • Give empirical intravenous antibiotics
  • Give IV fluids
  • Monitor urine output
18
Q

What are the 4 principes of management of odontogenic infection?

A
  • eliminate the cause of the infection ASAP
  • provide a path of least resistance
  • symptomatic management
  • review
19
Q

What is a sinus?

A
  • tract between tooth and oral cavity
  • indicates chronic infection
  • lined with granulation tissue and allows pus to be discharged
20
Q

What is a orocutaneous fistula?

A
  • fistula from tooth to outside of the mouth (extra-oral e.g. on chin)
  • epithelial lined, started as a sinus but developed over time
  • needs surgery to repair due to epithelial lining
21
Q

What is often seen with infection of the canine space?

A
  • infraorbital swelling
  • obliteration of nasolabial fold

happens when canine root long enough to pass muscles of facial expression

22
Q

How can infection in the infratemporal fossa space present?

A
  • severe trismus
  • bulging of temporalis
  • can lead to cavernous sinus thrombosis

rare but serious infection, usually from upper 8

23
Q

Why should you not leave an access cavity open after draining an abscess?

A

to prevent bacteria from the mouth entering the tooth and causing reinfection

24
Q

What method of drainage should be used when pus is present in soft tissues?

A

Hiltons method
- find most gravity dependent point of abscess
- incise through mucosa and periosteum with No 11 blade
- avoid vital structures
- blunt dissection to break down locules of pus
- same principles applied for extra-oral drainage
- avoids scarring which often follows natural rupture

25
Q

What should be done with pus that has been drained from an abscess?

A

collected for culture and sensitivity testing which allows appropriate antibiotics to be prescribed

26
Q

What is a down side of taking up pus with a syringe for culture and sensitivity testing?

A

can expose pus to air, killing anaerobic bacteria

27
Q

What general measures should a pt undertake after local measures and drainage etc?

A

supportive
- adequate fluid intake
- rest
- soft diet
- analgesics

28
Q

What are the indications for providing antibiotics in addition to local measures?

A
  • systemic involvement
  • significant cellulitis
  • compromised host defences
  • involvement of fascial spaces
29
Q

When should a pt with infection be referred?

A
  • rapidly progressing infection
  • difficulty in breathing
  • difficulty in swallowing
  • involvement of fascial tissue spaces
  • temp >39
  • severe trismus
  • compromised host defences
  • infection to responding to Rx
30
Q

What sites of drainage would LA be sufficient for?

A
  • buccal/labial sulcus
  • palate - parallel to vessels
  • SL space - buccal and parallel to sublingual folds
31
Q

What is the management of Ludwig’s angina?

A

airway emergency
- bilateral Hilton’s drainage to decrompress the next
- tracheostomy ? - may not be possible
- IV steroids to reduce inflammatory drive
- IV high dose combination antibiotics
- irradiate cause once patient stable

32
Q

Why is Pen V now preferred as first line instead of amoxicillin?

A

try to use narrow spectrum rather than broad spectrum to minimise antibiotic resistance