---
name: managing-dental-emergencies
language: en
description: Guides emergency dental assessment with triage protocols and immediate management documentation. Use when managing dental emergencies, triaging urgent dental conditions, or documenting emergency dental care.
tags:
  - management
  - dental-medicine
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - General Dentistry
    - Oral Surgery
    - Periodontics
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---

# Managing Dental Emergencies

Guides emergency dental triage, immediate assessment, acute management documentation, and definitive follow-up planning per IADT dental trauma guidelines and ADA emergency care standards.

## Why This Skill Exists

Dental emergencies — avulsed teeth, uncontrolled post-extraction hemorrhage, Ludwig's angina, dental trauma in children — are time-critical. An avulsed permanent tooth loses viability in direct proportion to extra-alveolar dry time; a fascial space infection can obstruct the airway within hours. This skill enforces a triage-first protocol with time-stamped documentation, ensures life-threatening conditions are identified before dental conditions are addressed, and provides procedure-specific emergency management documentation that satisfies medicolegal requirements for emergency care.

---

## Checkpoint A — Emergency Triage Verification

### Immediate Assessment (Before Detailed History)
- **Airway**: Is the airway patent? Any stridor, difficulty swallowing, trismus limiting opening to < 20 mm, floor-of-mouth swelling?
- **Breathing**: Respiratory rate, SpO2 if available, any dyspnea or orthopnea
- **Circulation**: Pulse rate, blood pressure, active hemorrhage assessment, skin color/capillary refill
- **Level of consciousness**: Alert, oriented ×4? Any confusion suggesting sepsis or head injury?

### Life-Threatening Conditions — Immediate 911/ED Referral
- Ludwig's angina (bilateral submandibular space infection with floor-of-mouth elevation and airway compromise)
- Uncontrolled hemorrhage not responding to local measures after 30 minutes
- Facial or mandibular fracture with airway risk
- Anaphylaxis from dental materials or medications
- Syncope with prolonged unconsciousness or hemodynamic instability
- Suspected MI or stroke during dental treatment

### Required Inputs (After Life Threats Excluded)
- Chief complaint with exact onset time
- Mechanism of injury (for trauma cases)
- Pain assessment (location, VAS 0–10, character, triggers, duration)
- Current medications and allergies
- Tetanus status (for avulsion/luxation injuries)
- Last meal (relevant if sedation may be needed)

---

## Step 1 — Emergency Classification

Categorize the emergency to drive the appropriate protocol.

- **Dental trauma**: Tooth fracture (enamel, enamel-dentin, enamel-dentin-pulp), luxation (concussion, subluxation, extrusive, lateral, intrusive), avulsion — classify per IADT guidelines
- **Acute pulpal/periapical**: Symptomatic irreversible pulpitis, acute apical abscess, acute periodontal abscess
- **Post-procedural**: Post-extraction hemorrhage, dry socket, post-surgical infection, displaced root tip
- **Soft tissue trauma**: Lip laceration, tongue laceration, mucosal avulsion, floor-of-mouth hematoma
- **Infection/swelling**: Localized vestibular abscess, facial cellulitis, fascial space infection, pericoronitis
- **Prosthetic emergency**: Broken denture, dislodged crown with aspiration risk, fractured orthodontic wire lacerating mucosa

---

## Step 2 — Dental Trauma Management (IADT Protocol)

For traumatic dental injuries, follow International Association of Dental Traumatology guidelines.

- **Enamel fracture (uncomplicated)**: Smooth sharp edges, composite restoration if esthetically significant; CDT D2330–D2335
- **Crown fracture with pulp exposure**: In permanent teeth — partial pulpotomy (Cvek) with MTA or calcium hydroxide if < 24 hours and open apex, or direct pulp cap; in mature teeth with large exposure — RCT; document exposure size and bleeding
- **Avulsion of permanent tooth**: This is the most time-sensitive dental emergency
  - Extra-alveolar time < 60 minutes, tooth stored in appropriate medium (milk, Hank's BSS, saliva, saline): reimplant, splint with flexible splint for 2 weeks, initiate RCT within 7–10 days
  - Extra-alveolar dry time > 60 minutes: soak in sodium fluoride solution 20 minutes, reimplant, semi-rigid splint for 4 weeks; RCT before or at reimplantation; prognosis guarded — replacement resorption expected
  - Primary tooth avulsion: Do NOT reimplant (risk of damage to permanent successor)
- **Luxation injuries**: Concussion/subluxation — monitor, soft diet, flexible splint if needed for 2 weeks; lateral luxation — reposition under local anesthesia, flexible splint 4 weeks; intrusion — allow spontaneous re-eruption if immature apex, surgical/orthodontic repositioning if mature apex
- **Documentation requirements**: Exact time of injury, storage medium and duration, extra-alveolar time, type and duration of splint, baseline pulp test (may be unreliable initially), baseline radiograph

---

## Step 3 — Acute Infection Management

Assess severity and determine whether outpatient or inpatient management is appropriate.

- **Localized vestibular abscess**: I&D under local anesthesia; establish drainage; antibiotic only if systemic signs present (fever, lymphadenopathy, malaise) or patient immunocompromised; CDT D7510
- **Facial cellulitis**: Diffuse, indurated swelling without fluctuance; requires antibiotic therapy (amoxicillin 500 mg TID or amoxicillin-clavulanate 875/125 BID; clindamycin 300 mg QID if penicillin-allergic); 24-hour follow-up mandatory
- **Fascial space infection**: Submandibular, sublingual, parapharyngeal, or retropharyngeal involvement; assess for trismus, dysphagia, dyspnea, floor-of-mouth elevation; if any airway concern — IMMEDIATE ED referral; do not delay with dental procedures
- **Pericoronitis**: Irrigation under operculum, CHX rinse, antibiotics if systemic signs present; document operculectomy or extraction plan for definitive management
- **Documentation**: Record vital signs (temperature, pulse, BP), size of swelling (measure in cm), extent of trismus (maximum interincisal opening in mm), systemic symptoms, antibiotic selected with rationale, follow-up plan with specific deterioration criteria for ED presentation

---

## Step 4 — Post-Procedural Emergency Management

Address complications from prior dental procedures.

- **Post-extraction hemorrhage**: Identify source (soft tissue vs. bony vs. systemic coagulopathy); apply direct pressure with damp gauze 30 minutes; if persistent — infiltrate with local anesthetic with vasoconstrictor, curette socket to stimulate new clot, place gelatin sponge or oxidized cellulose, suture socket; document anticoagulant status and recent medication changes
- **Alveolar osteitis (dry socket)**: Onset typically day 3–5; gently irrigate with warm saline (no high-pressure lavage into socket); place medicated dressing (eugenol-based or non-eugenol iodoform); change every 2–3 days; document location, VAS score, treatment, and follow-up schedule
- **Displaced root tip**: Radiograph to locate; if in maxillary sinus — referral to oral surgeon; if in soft tissue — attempt retrieval or document decision to leave in situ with monitoring rationale and informed consent

---

## Step 5 — Pain Management and Prescribing

Document multimodal pain management for emergency presentations.

- **First-line**: Ibuprofen 400–600 mg q6h (if no contraindications) combined with acetaminophen 500–1000 mg q6h — this combination provides analgesic efficacy equivalent to opioids for dental pain per ADA evidence review
- **Second-line**: Add opioid only when NSAID/acetaminophen combination is insufficient or contraindicated; prescribe minimum effective dose and quantity (typically 3-day supply); document PDMP check per state requirement
- **Nerve blocks for analgesia**: IAN block or specific infiltration provides immediate relief while definitive treatment is planned; document block as a therapeutic intervention
- **Prescribing documentation**: Drug name, dose, frequency, quantity, refills, rationale for selection, PDMP check date and result, patient counseling on use and disposal

---

## Checkpoint B — Emergency Documentation Review

- [ ] Triage assessment documented with time stamp (airway, breathing, circulation evaluated first)
- [ ] Chief complaint recorded with exact onset time and mechanism (for trauma)
- [ ] Emergency classification assigned (trauma, pulpal, infection, post-procedural, soft tissue)
- [ ] Vital signs recorded (pulse, BP, temperature, respiratory rate as applicable)
- [ ] Examination findings documented (clinical and radiographic)
- [ ] Immediate management documented with procedure details
- [ ] Medications prescribed with dose, frequency, quantity, and rationale
- [ ] Follow-up plan documented with specific time frame and escalation criteria
- [ ] Patient advised of warning signs requiring ED presentation
- [ ] CDT code assigned (D9110 palliative, D7510 I&D, or procedure-specific code)

---

## Quality Audit

| # | Audit Item | Pass Criteria |
|---|-----------|---------------|
| 1 | Triage documented | Life-threat screening documented before dental assessment |
| 2 | Time stamps | Onset time, presentation time, and treatment times recorded |
| 3 | Classification assigned | Emergency type categorized per Step 1 categories |
| 4 | Vitals recorded | BP, pulse, temperature recorded for infection and trauma cases |
| 5 | IADT protocol followed | For trauma: storage medium, extra-alveolar time, splint type/duration documented |
| 6 | Infection severity graded | Localized vs. cellulitis vs. fascial space documented with measurements |
| 7 | Pain management documented | Multimodal approach with PDMP check for opioid prescriptions |
| 8 | Follow-up specific | Return date, assessment goals, and ED escalation criteria documented |
| 9 | Informed consent | Emergency consent documented; patient aware of treatment limitations |
| 10 | Definitive plan stated | Emergency management linked to definitive treatment plan |

---

## Guidelines

- Always assess airway, breathing, and circulation before dental-specific evaluation in any emergency presentation
- Avulsed permanent teeth are the most time-sensitive dental emergency: every minute of extra-alveolar dry time reduces prognosis — document times meticulously
- Never reimplant a primary (baby) tooth — document the rationale and educate the parent
- Ludwig's angina and fascial space infections with airway compromise require immediate hospital referral — do not attempt dental treatment first
- Use IADT (International Association of Dental Traumatology) guidelines for all dental trauma classification and management
- For post-extraction hemorrhage, always consider underlying coagulopathy or anticoagulant therapy — document medication review
- Prescribe opioids only when NSAID/acetaminophen combination is insufficient; document PDMP check and clinical justification per state and federal prescribing requirements
- All emergency patients require documented follow-up within 24–48 hours for infection cases and 1–2 weeks for trauma cases
- Emergency treatment documentation must include what was NOT done and why (e.g., "definitive RCT deferred due to acute infection; pulpotomy performed for drainage; RCT planned within 1 week of antibiotic therapy")
- Tag all emergency encounters with [EMERGENCY] flag in the record for rapid retrieval during follow-up
