Behavior of bucco-sinus communications due to dental extractions in Primary Health Care
Keywords:
Tooth extraction/methods.Abstract
An applied type, descriptive, retrospective and longitudinal study was conducted to determine the behavior of bucco-sinus communications in primary health care in Maracaibo municipality, Zulia State, Venezuela during January 2006-2008. The target group included all patients attending to the dentist office for dental extraction in the maxilla, and the sample consisted of the 38 patients suffering from bucco-sinus communication as a complication of dental extraction, including only the iatrogenic-traumatic ones, those provoked in accidents and those associated with other pathologies. Data were collected from the individual clinical histories and in a form arranged to this purpose. Absolute numbers and percentages, tables and statistical graphics were arranged to understand the results better. Female sex and ages from 35 to 59 in both sexes were the most affected. The exodontias of the first and second left superior molar showed the highest incidence, iatrogenic-traumatic communications prevailed in frequency. Immediate bucco-sinus communications represented de majority and medical-surgical treatment was the most successful therapeutic method used. The diversity of criteria regarding the diagnosis and treatment of this dental complication as well as the inappropriate management in primary health care must be considered. The immediate strategy to train Comprehensive Dentists is significant to seek out common points, join criteria and define therapeutic behaviors.Downloads
References
1. Arana B, Zelada L. Análisis de la relación de las piezas dentarias con el piso del seno maxilar y las complicaciones odontológicas consecuentes. Endod Volvi. 1996; 10(10): 39-42.
2. Gay Escoda C, Berini Aytes L. Cirugía bucal. Madrid; 1999. p. 317-831.
3. Gay Escoda C. Temas de Cirugía Bucal. Baracelona: Editorial grafica Signos; 2000. p 556.
4. Gay Escoda C. Temas de cirugía bucal. Barcelona: Editorial Gráfica Signos; 1994. p. 1119-1161.
5. Laskin DM. Cirugía bucal y maxilofacial. Argentina: Editorial Médica Panamericana; 1988. p.41.
6. Ries Centeno GA. Cirugía bucal. Buenos Aires: El Ateneo; 1994.p.111-118
7. Berini L, Gay Esccoda C. Infección odontogénica. Barcelona: MCR; 1999.p.187-192
8. Gay Escoda C, Berini L. Infección odontogénica. Madrid: Ergon; 1997. p.556-564
9. Hernández F, Reyes JO. Comunicación oroantral por extracción dental. Presentación de un caso. Rev Sanid Mad 2005;49 (3):51-4
10. Oyonarte Weldt R, Fernández Godoy E. Estudio epidemiológico de la Atención Primaria de Urgencia en la Comuna de Los Condes. Rev de la Facultad de Odontología. Universidad de Chile [Internet]. 2007 [Citado 20 may 2006]; 16(1): [Aprox. 2p.]. Disponible en: http://www.odontomarketing.com/articulos/art18.htm
11. Venezuela: población. Demografia de Venezuela [actualizado 16 mar 2012]. Disponible en: http://www.pdv.com/lexico/venezuela/poblacion.html
12. Shafer W, Leny G. Tratado de patología bucal. México: Nueva Editorial Interamericana, 2005.p.533.
13. Lambertini A, Guerra ME. Reporte de Casos Clínicos. Rev estomatol Integrada [Internet]. 2006 [citado 24 abr 2008]; 7(1-2): [aprox.2 p.]. Disponible en: http://www.academiadeestomatologiadelperu.com/estomatologia_integrada.html
14. Del Rey Santamaría M, Valmaceda Castellón E, Berini Aytes L, Gay Escoda C. Incidencia de la comunicación bucosinusal tras la extracción de 389 molares superiores. Med oral, Patol oral, Cir Bucal [Internet]. 2006 [Citado 15 feb 2008]; 11(4): [Aprox. 5p.]. Disponible en: http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?pid=S1698-69462006000400008&script=sci_arttext
15. J-J Lee, S-H Kok, H-H Chang, P-J Yang, Hahn L, Y-S Kuo. Repair of Oral Antral Comunications in the third molar region by random palatal flap. Int J Oral and Maxilo-Facial surg [Internet]. 2002 [Citado 15 feb 2008]; 31(6): [Aprox. 3p.]. Disponibles en: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0901502701902097
16. Ulloa Morales Y. Comunicación bucosinusal. Rev 16 de abril [Internet]. 2008 [citado 23 may 2008]; (234): [aprox. 2p.]. Disponible en: http://www.16deabril.sld.cu/rev/234/12.html

Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors who have publications with this journal agree to the following terms: Authors will retain their copyrights and grant the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will be publication of their work, which will be simultaneously subject to the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY-NC 4.0) that allows third parties to share the work as long as its author and first publication in this journal are indicated.
Authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements for distribution of the published version of the work (e.g.: deposit it in an institutional telematic archive or publish it in a volume). Likewise, and according to the recommendations of the Medical Sciences Editorial (ECIMED), authors must declare in each article their contribution according to the CRediT taxonomy (contributor roles). This taxonomy includes 14 roles, which can be used to represent the tasks typically performed by contributors in scientific academic production. It should be consulted in monograph) whenever initial publication in this journal is indicated. Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work through the Internet (e.g., in institutional telematic archives or on their web page) before and during the submission process, which may produce interesting exchanges and increase citations of the published work. (See The effect of open access). https://casrai.org/credit/