Principles of Periodontal Instrumentation Part 2 PDF
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Uploaded by SplendidNephrite8490
University College London Hospitals
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Summary
This document provides detailed information on periodontal instrumentation best practices. It covers crucial aspects like learning outcomes, instrumentation principles, patient compliance, and accessibility considerations in a dental setting. The document aims to educate learners on the techniques and processes involved in non-surgical procedures.
Full Transcript
Principles of Periodontal Instrumentation Part 2 Learning Outcomes By the end of this session students should be able to: Explain keys components involved in delivering non-surgical instrumentation Conceptualise the challenges associated with non-surgical instrumentation Recognise proce...
Principles of Periodontal Instrumentation Part 2 Learning Outcomes By the end of this session students should be able to: Explain keys components involved in delivering non-surgical instrumentation Conceptualise the challenges associated with non-surgical instrumentation Recognise processes to address with identified challenges to support positive treatment outcomes Determine the key objectives of instrumentation 2 Principles of Instrumentation Patient compliance Accessibility Visibility, Illumination & retraction Condition of instruments Clean field Operator Action – Stabilisation, activation & stroke 3 Patient Compliance No Disease disease Host Defence & susceptibili Host ty Defence & susceptibili Bacterial ty Load Bacterial Local / Lo a d Systemic factor 4 Patient Compliance 5 No Disease disease Host Defence & susceptibili Host ty Defence & susceptibili Bacterial ty Load Bacterial Local / Load Systemic factor Accessibility during Instrumentation 7 Accessibility continued – linked to Operator and Patient Positions in Dentistry Ergonomics – clinician and nurse Increases visibility Increases opportunity of using ‘power’ / ‘leverage’ in a safe, effective and efficient manner Operator fatigue Reduce risk of trauma to patient Reduce risk of RSI Four handed dentistry Surgery design 8 Visibility, Illumination & Retraction - linked to Operator and Patient Positions in Dentistry Can you see? How wide can the patient open? Direct vision Indirect vision – when do you use this? Retraction – of what? Why? How? 9 Condition of Instrument Sharpness Working end features Warping Bent – trauma from sterilisation Inappropriate storage 10 Clean field Working in an area that is wet Wet with what? Pooling of saliva / bleeding What is the issue? Resolved how? 11 Operator Action linked NSPT 1,2 & 3 Stabilisation Action Stroke 12 Automaticity 13 Objectives of Non-Surgical Periodontal Instrumentation To remove and disrupt biofilm To remove hard deposits – example? To eliminate or reduce inflammation To promote soft tissue attachment Presenting an optimal tooth surface which is as biocompatible with the host as possible 14 Motivation Behaviour change Praise Ownership Coaching Monitoring Educate 15 Reading References No turning back: posture in dental practice | BDJ Team (nature.com) Gehrig, J. (2020). Fundamentals of Periodontal Instrumentation. 7th ed. 16