Table 3.118.
Key considerations for dental management in myasthenia gravis (see text)
| Management modifications* | Comments/possible complications | |
|---|---|---|
| Risk assessment | 2 | Myasthenic crisis; aspiration |
| Appropriate dental care | 2/4 | During a remission |
| Pain and anxiety control | ||
| – Local anaesthesia | 2 | Minimal doses; avoid ester type |
| – Conscious sedation | 2/4 | Avoid intravenous sedation |
| – General anaesthesia | 3/4 | Avoid drugs that aggravate MG |
| Patient access and positioning | ||
| – Access to dental office | 0 | |
| – Timing of treatment | 1 | Early morning; 1–2h after medication intake |
| – Patient positioning | 1 | Upright position |
| Treatment modification | ||
| – Oral surgery | 1 | |
| – Implantology | 1 | |
| – Conservative/Endodontics | 1 | |
| – Fixed prosthetics | 1 | |
| – Removable prosthetics | 1/5 | Unstable prostheses |
| – Non-surgical periodontology | 1 | |
| – Surgical periodontology | 1 | |
| Hazardous and contraindicated drugs | 2 | Avoid aspirin, clindamycin and tetracyclines |
0 = No special considerations. 1 = Caution advised. 2 = Specialised medical advice recommended in some cases. 3 = Specialised medical advice mandatory. 4 = Only to be performed in hospital environment. 5 = Should be avoided.