I have had four wisdom teeth pulled while on dialysis. Just had to take antibiotic before the appointment. Seemed to be no big deal to my dentist.
I have not had any tooth extractions on dialysis but I have had several abcesses in my life. They have your mother on antibiotics because abscesses are infections under the teeth. Just as a boil on the skin swells and hurts the abcess forms a pus sack which pushes on the teeth. It is very painful. The cure is antibiotics to fight the infection and the dentist may need to pull the tooth but usually just drilling into the infection works like lancing a boil, it releases the pressure and 99% of the pain goes away. The drilled hole is usually left open for a time to allow draining and eventually it's filled like a cavity.
Quote from: jo on June 26, 2015, 09:37:13 PMMy mom has been having a very painful toothache from yesterday and we took her to the ER when the pain got worse today. The ER doctors think it is probably a tooth abscess as she was very sensitive to the touch and put her on penicillin (500 mg 4 times a day) for the next 14 days. We have to call the dentist on Monday to set up an appointment for the tooth extraction. Currently there are 2 tooth causing severe pain and they both need to be extracted. How does tooth extraction affect dialysis patients? Any care recommendations before and after the procedure? Is it painful? They were saying a resident dentist would probably do the extraction but I am re-thinking this. I would definitely want a oral surgeon to do it based on her case. She just got off the antibiotic (cefazolin) yesterday for her staph infection, and again, she is on penicillin now. Does the nephrologists and cardiologists need to be there during the procedure?Sorry I have a lot of questions. We are very worried. Please help us. I really appreciate everyone's time.NO, neither a nephrologist nor a cardiologist needs to be present during the extraction. However, you absolutely need TO CONTACT your mother's nephrologist to let him/her know what is going on with her oral hygiene care. Let the neph know she just finished taking one antibiotic and was immediately placed on another. Make sure this is OK, because standard protocol is for hemodialysis patients to take a round of penicillin right before having tooth extractions. Have your mom's neph CONTACT the dentist to determine optimal dosage, especially since she has been on so much antibiotics already. Plus, patients with compromised renal function might have to be on lower doses of certain antibiotics. Also, the extractions should be done on a NON DIALYSIS day because heparin (used to prevent blood clotting while getting dialysis) may cause EXTRA BLEEDING.
My mom has been having a very painful toothache from yesterday and we took her to the ER when the pain got worse today. The ER doctors think it is probably a tooth abscess as she was very sensitive to the touch and put her on penicillin (500 mg 4 times a day) for the next 14 days. We have to call the dentist on Monday to set up an appointment for the tooth extraction. Currently there are 2 tooth causing severe pain and they both need to be extracted. How does tooth extraction affect dialysis patients? Any care recommendations before and after the procedure? Is it painful? They were saying a resident dentist would probably do the extraction but I am re-thinking this. I would definitely want a oral surgeon to do it based on her case. She just got off the antibiotic (cefazolin) yesterday for her staph infection, and again, she is on penicillin now. Does the nephrologists and cardiologists need to be there during the procedure?Sorry I have a lot of questions. We are very worried. Please help us. I really appreciate everyone's time.
Quote from: jo on June 27, 2015, 11:14:40 AMI already contacted my mom's nephrologist and without even looking at what the ER doctor prescribed, his answer was: "GO WITH WHATEVER THE ER DOCTOR PRESCRIBED. THEY ALWAYS DO THE RIGHT THING." Is 2000 mg of penicillin per day for 14 days too much for renal patients?I am not a doctor and cannot answer that question. I can only make suggestions. Ask the ER doctor if this is the usual dose of penicillin for someone with renal failure. Also, ask your pharmacist what is the standard penicillin recommendation for a tooth extraction for someone with your mother's problems - diabetes and renal failure - and should someone on hemodialysis take that amount or a reduced dose.From a quick internet search.........."Patients undergoing renal dialysis require special management. The timing of appointments in regard to dialysis scheduling, as well as the dosage and types of medicines used are issues that must be managed. " Full article - http://www.animated-teeth.com/tooth_extractions/t2_teeth_extractions.htm"Management during Dental Treatment - 2. Use caution and alter dosage form when using drugs eliminated by the kidneys i.e. penicillin (often reduced to 500 mg. two times per day versus four times times per day). 3. If patient on renal dialysis, dental appointment should be done on the day following dialysis." Full article (see page 26) - http://dental.pacific.edu/Documents/dental_prof/Medically_Complex.pdf"Kidney patients are advised to tell their kidney doctor when a dental procedure is required. The doctor may recommend antibiotics be taken prior to the procedure to help guard against infection. The dentist should be made aware that their patient has kidney disease or is on dialysis. Ideally, dental procedures, such as tooth extraction, should occur on a non-dialysis day for those on hemodialysis. Heparin, administered during hemodialysis, may cause some people to have extra bleeding."Full article - http://www.davita.com/kidney-disease/overview/symptoms-and-diagnosis/dental-health-for-people-with-kidney-disease/e/4731
I already contacted my mom's nephrologist and without even looking at what the ER doctor prescribed, his answer was: "GO WITH WHATEVER THE ER DOCTOR PRESCRIBED. THEY ALWAYS DO THE RIGHT THING." Is 2000 mg of penicillin per day for 14 days too much for renal patients?
To answer your question I have had5 abscesses in my life, they were in three teeth. Two had only one access and were drilled, to this day I am anazed how much the pain dropped after the drilling. One tooth had three it turned out one of the past dentists had nicked the outside of the tooth when filling a cavity and created a place for the infection to hide and start up again after I stopped the antibiotics. So no it is as far as I know unusual to remove a tooth for the first access., by the way the pain from a abscess is about the worst pain I have ever felt.
Unless the abscess is huge, have you ever seen a picture of some one with the side of their face swollen that is what happens when the access has pushed out to the side, it decreases the pain but makes it more difficult to treat. The only one who can really say is the dentist, there is a chance the tooth can be saved. The only reason I had a tooth pulled was it had a recurring abscess and after it was pulled it was obvious it had to be pulled do to the damage done by a earlier dentist. Thing only thing you should tell your mother is that after the dentist treats her the pain will go away.
Check with your nephrologist about the oxycodone its metabolized by the kidneys and its effects last longer in patients with ESRD. The one time it was prescribed for me I was talking to my iPad, it wasnt turned on, apparently I was. One day a proper tiny lady came to dialysis drugged to the gills. Her doctor had prescribed oxy one pill a day on Friday. By Monday she was high as a kite. After dialysis the drugs were gone she was fine,
Lot of misinformation on this thread folks. 1. Penicillin is not effected by the kidneys . The dose is the same for dialysis patients as anyone else The only difference is the dose should be given AFTER dialysis on dialysis days. A standard dose is ok .2. Oxycodone is not effected by the kidneys much either., It is LIVER metabolized. My wife takes massive doses of it daily for years with no issues on dialysis. 3. Dental abcesses can be treated by simple endodontics which is a drainage of the infection then a root canal. I just had that done myself to save the tooth. Pulling the tooth is NOT required unless you don't want to save the tooth. Pulling it is forever so a root canal can be a better choice. It is expensive but you get to keep the tooth.I agree with calling the nephrologist about any new meds but in general dental abcesses are very common and very easy to treat. (I have pulled a couple of my wifes teeth and that is easy too, but don't try this yourselves). addendum; oral penicillin like pen v/k is the usual penicillin and it is not kidney excreted. the older pen g which is IM/IV is different and the dose has to be cut for kidney patients. However most presciptions are ORAL pen V /k and those are fine on dialysis .