Predictor evaluation of postoperative morbidity after surgical removal of mandibular third molars

Authors

  • Trond Inge Berge Department of Oral Surgery and Oral Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
  • Olav Egil Bøe Department of Oral Surgery and Oral Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016359409027591

Keywords:

Impacted teeth, molar, third, oral surgery, postoperative pain

Abstract

The effect of several pre-and per-operative variables on indicators of postoperative morbidity was assessed in 204 patients after unilateral mandibular third-molar surgery. The variables included gender, age, use of tobacco and alcohol, state of eruption, depth and angulation of the tooth, duration of the operation, pericoronitis, and time of day of surgery. Visual analogue scales were used for patient assessment of pain and sweving and for clinical assessment of swelling. Maximum pain was indicated 6 h postoperatively and maximum swelling the first postoperative evening. The results showed a mean reduction of mouth opening capacity (trismus) of 31% the 1st postoperative day. Mean analgesic consumption was 3.7 tablets, mean number of days of inability to work 1.1, and the rate of postoperative alveolitis I. 9%. The variation of the morbidity indicators was considerable. Multiple classification analyses showed that the predictors explained from 17% (clinically assessed swelling) to 8% (pam 6 h postoperatively) of the variance of these indicators. It is concluded that these commonly used predictors only to a minor extent can explain the wide variation in postoperative morbidity after mandibular third-molar surgery.

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Published

1994-01-01