| name | managing-oral-surgery-cases |
| language | en |
| description | Structures oral surgery documentation with extraction complexity assessment and complication management. Use when documenting extractions, assessing surgical complexity, or managing oral surgery complications. |
| tags | ["management","dental-medicine","surgical"] |
| metadata | {"author":"casemark","practice_areas":["General Dentistry","Oral Surgery","Periodontics"],"document_types":["Management Report"],"skill_modes":["Management","Coordination"]} |
Managing Oral Surgery Cases
Structures oral surgery case documentation with extraction complexity assessment, surgical planning, intraoperative documentation, complication management, and post-operative monitoring per AAOMS guidelines.
Why This Skill Exists
Oral surgery carries the highest complication rate and malpractice exposure of any routine dental procedure. Third molar extractions alone account for a disproportionate share of dental malpractice claims, primarily from nerve injury (IAN and lingual nerve), displaced roots into the maxillary sinus or submandibular space, and failure to manage post-operative complications (alveolar osteitis, hemorrhage, infection). This skill enforces pre-surgical risk assessment, standardized complexity grading, step-by-step operative documentation, and complication monitoring to reduce adverse outcomes and ensure defensible records.
Checkpoint A โ Pre-Surgical Verification
Required Inputs
- Current panoramic radiograph or periapical of the surgical site; CBCT when indicated (proximity to IAN, displaced roots, complex anatomy)
- Complete medical history with attention to: anticoagulants (warfarin INR, DOACs), antiplatelet agents, bisphosphonate/denosumab use (MRONJ risk), diabetes status, immunosuppression, radiation history to head/neck
- Current medication list with dose and frequency
- Blood pressure and pulse recorded pre-operatively
- Signed surgical consent form detailing risks specific to the procedure
- ASA physical status classification documented
- Antibiotic prophylaxis determination (AHA guidelines for cardiac conditions; AAOMS guidelines for immunocompromised patients)
Intake Questions
- What is the indication for surgery (caries, periodontal disease, orthodontic, pathology, prophylactic third molar removal)?
- Is the patient taking anticoagulants or antiplatelets, and has the prescribing physician been consulted about perioperative management?
- Has the patient taken bisphosphonates or denosumab (oral or IV), and for what duration?
- Does the patient have a history of difficult extractions, prolonged bleeding, or poor wound healing?
- Has the patient had radiation to the head and neck region (osteoradionecrosis risk)?
- Is the patient aware of specific risks including nerve injury, sinus communication, jaw fracture, and dry socket?
- Who is the responsible driver/escort for patients receiving sedation?
Step 1 โ Extraction Complexity Assessment
Grade surgical difficulty before beginning the procedure.
- Simple extraction (D7140): Tooth erupted, intact crown, single or convergent roots, adequate bone support for forceps delivery, no pathology complicating extraction
- Surgical extraction with soft tissue flap (D7210): Requires mucoperiosteal flap elevation; tooth partially erupted, root tips only remaining, or bone removal required for delivery
- Surgical extraction with bone removal (D7220/D7230): Impacted tooth requiring flap, bone removal, and possible sectioning; classify impaction depth (soft tissue, partial bony, full bony) and angulation (mesioangular, distoangular, horizontal, vertical)
- Third molar complexity factors: Proximity to IAN canal (< 2 mm on panoramic or CBCT contact), root morphology (curved, hooked, dilacerated, hypercementosed), relationship to second molar and ramus, depth of impaction (Pell-Gregory classification: Class I/II/III, Position A/B/C), Winter classification for angulation
- Risk factors elevating complexity: Age > 35, ankylosis, root resorption, proximity to maxillary sinus floor, prior radiation, osteoporosis
Step 2 โ Surgical Planning
Document the planned approach before starting.
- Anesthesia plan: Type (local only, local with oral sedation, IV sedation, general anesthesia); block and infiltration technique
- Incision design: Envelope flap, triangular flap, or modified approach; planned incision location relative to tooth and adjacent structures
- Bone removal plan: Anticipated extent of buccal bone removal; bur type (handpiece at 35,000 rpm with copious irrigation vs. piezoelectric surgery)
- Sectioning plan: For impacted molars โ crown-root separation, furcation split, or root sectioning; document planned cut lines
- Nerve management: If IAN or lingual nerve is at risk, document planned approach to minimize injury (coronectomy consideration, intentional staged extraction, nerve lateralization referral)
- Sinus precautions: For maxillary posterior teeth, document proximity to sinus floor and planned approach if perforation occurs
Step 3 โ Intraoperative Documentation
Record the surgical procedure in detail.
- Anesthesia delivered: Type, concentration, vasoconstrictor, volume, injection sites, aspiration results
- Incision and flap: Actual incision design, location, and extent of flap elevation
- Bone removal: Extent, instrument used, irrigation method and volume
- Tooth delivery: Forceps/elevator technique, sectioning performed (describe cut lines), root tip retrieval method if fractured
- Socket assessment: Inspection for residual root fragments, granulation tissue curettage, buccal plate integrity, sinus membrane integrity (Valsalva test for maxillary posterior)
- Complications encountered: Root tip fracture (retained vs. retrieved), oro-antral communication (size, repair method โ primary closure, buccal advancement flap, collagen plug), nerve paresthesia noted (test lip/tongue sensation before dismissal), excessive hemorrhage (management method), alveolar fracture
- Grafting (if performed): Material type, manufacturer, lot number (per FDA tracking), membrane if used, fixation method
- Closure: Suture material (chromic gut, Vicryl, silk), size, pattern (simple interrupted, figure-8, mattress), number of sutures placed
Step 4 โ Sinus Communication Management
If oro-antral communication is created during maxillary extraction, follow AAOMS protocol.
- Detection: Valsalva test (patient exhales through nose while nostrils are pinched; bubbling through socket = positive), direct visual inspection, probe test
- Small communication (< 2 mm): Blood clot formation may be sufficient; place collagen plug, figure-8 suture, and sinus precautions
- Moderate communication (2โ5 mm): Primary closure with buccal advancement flap; collagen membrane or resorbable barrier
- Large communication (> 5 mm): Buccal fat pad flap or palatal rotation flap; consider referral to oral surgeon if beyond comfort level
- Post-communication protocol: Sinus precautions (no nose blowing, no straw use, no smoking, sneeze with mouth open) for 2 weeks; decongestant (pseudoephedrine) and antibiotic (amoxicillin + clavulanate or clindamycin if allergic) for 7โ10 days
- Documentation: Size of communication, repair method, materials used, post-op instructions specific to sinus communication, follow-up plan
Step 5 โ Post-Operative Management and Complications
Document post-operative care and monitor for complications.
- Immediate post-op: Gauze pressure for 30โ45 minutes, ice packs 20 minutes on/off, written post-operative instructions provided
- Pain management: Multimodal approach โ ibuprofen 400โ600 mg q6h alternating with acetaminophen 500โ1000 mg q6h; opioids only for breakthrough pain; document rationale per state PDMP requirements
- Alveolar osteitis (dry socket): Onset day 3โ5 post-extraction; severe throbbing pain, exposed bone in socket, foul taste; treat with gentle irrigation and medicated dressing (eugenol-based or iodoform); change dressing every 2โ3 days until symptoms resolve
- Post-operative infection: Fever, increasing swelling > 48 hours, purulent drainage, trismus; culture and sensitivity when possible; empiric antibiotic coverage (amoxicillin or clindamycin); assess for fascial space involvement requiring I&D
- Hemorrhage: Immediate post-op โ additional pressure, gelatin sponge, topical thrombin, suturing; delayed hemorrhage โ evaluate for anticoagulant complication or systemic coagulopathy
- Nerve injury assessment: Test light touch, two-point discrimination, and directional sensation for IAN (lower lip, chin) and lingual nerve (anterior 2/3 tongue); document findings at each follow-up; refer if no improvement at 3 months
Checkpoint B โ Surgical Case Review
Quality Audit
| # | Audit Item | Pass Criteria |
|---|
| 1 | Complexity grading | Pre-operative classification documented before surgery |
| 2 | Consent specific | Risks listed include nerve injury, sinus communication, fracture as applicable |
| 3 | Anesthesia complete | Type, volume, sites, aspiration documented |
| 4 | Operative detail | Step-by-step technique documented, not just "tooth extracted" |
| 5 | Complications addressed | All intraoperative events documented with management |
| 6 | Socket assessment | Residual fragments, buccal plate, sinus membrane evaluated and documented |
| 7 | Nerve check | Post-operative sensation documented for at-risk extractions |
| 8 | Post-op instructions | Written instructions given; medication prescriptions documented |
| 9 | CDT code accuracy | D7140 vs. D7210 vs. D7220/D7230 matches actual complexity |
| 10 | Follow-up plan | Return visit scheduled with specific assessment objectives |
Guidelines
- Never document an extraction as simply "tooth extracted without complication" โ record the technique, instruments, and delivery method
- Assess and document IAN proximity for all mandibular third molars; if radiographic signs of proximity are present (root darkening, narrowing, deflection, interruption of canal), recommend CBCT before extraction
- Bisphosphonate patients require MRONJ risk assessment before any extraction; document drug name, route (oral vs. IV), duration of therapy, and discussion of MRONJ risk with patient per AAOMS Position Paper
- For anticoagulant patients, document the perioperative management decision (continue therapy with local hemostatic measures vs. hold medication with physician consultation) and clinical rationale
- Coronectomy is a legitimate alternative to complete extraction for lower third molars with intimate IAN contact โ document the decision rationale and follow-up plan for root monitoring
- All extracted tissue sent for pathologic examination when pathology is suspected; document specimen submission and receiving laboratory
- Dry socket occurs in 2โ5% of routine extractions and 25โ30% of mandibular third molar extractions โ proactive patient education about risk factors (smoking, oral contraceptives, traumatic extraction) is a documentation requirement
- Post-operative nerve injury must be documented at each follow-up with standardized sensory testing; refer to oral surgery or neurology if no recovery by 3 months