Emergencies in Dental Practice: Prevention and Treatment |
Contents
Chapter | 9 |
When Your Office Patient Dies | 12 |
Chapter 3 | 33 |
Copyright | |
39 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid action activity acute addition administration agents alcohol allergic analgesic anesthesia anesthetic anticoagulant anxiety appear arterial barbiturates becomes blood pressure body breath cardiac cause cells cent changes chapter chronic Class clinical common complete considered continuous coronary damage dangerous death Decreased dental depression develop disease doctor dosage doses drugs effect emergency evaluation experience factor failure fear feel frequently function heart hypertension Hypothyroidism important increased indicated individual infections INTERACTIONS known lead less liver loss major minute monitoring muscle myocardial infarction nature normal observation Occasional occur oral oxygen pain patient physical possible potential practice practitioner present problem procedures produce pulse question Rare reactions reduced relatively renal require respiratory response result risk sedation severe significant signs skin specific stimulation stress symptoms taking techniques temperature tests therapy tion tissue toxic tranquilizers treatment usually ventricular