SUMMARY

Patients sometimes present to a medical practitioner with dental pain if they cannot see a dentist.

Doctors need to be aware of the common dental diseases that result in pain so they can help to manage the patient’s symptoms until they are able to see a dentist.

Appropriate advice regarding analgesics for dental pain is important. Paracetamol and ibuprofen are more effective in combination than either of them alone, with or without opioids.

Antibiotics are only indicated as an adjunct to dental treatment when there are signs of systemic involvement, progressive and rapid spread of infection, or when the patient is immunocompromised.

 

Introduction

Patients may present to a medical practitioner with dental pain, dento-maxillofacial trauma and treatment-related complications. This happens frequently in emergency departments, but also in general practice.1 A recent survey found that dental conditions accounted for over 70,000 avoidable hospital admissions in Australia during 2016–17.2 Yet, many doctors have limited training in the diagnosis and management of common dental problems.3

Besides referral to a dentist, the medical practitioner can provide appropriate advice regarding analgesics, with consideration of the patient’s medical history (including recent dental treatment), the benefits and risks of the drugs and severity of the pain. It is also important to know when antibiotics should and should not be prescribed.4 Community pharmacists also see many patients with dental pain, particularly out of hours, and need guidance about what to advise.

 

Questions to ask when assessing oral pain

When obtaining a pain history, the mnemonic SOCRATES can be useful:5

Site – Where is the pain?

Onset – When did it start?

Character – Can you describe the pain?

Radiation – Does the pain spread anywhere?

Associations – Are there other problems associated with the pain?

Time course – Does the pain follow any pattern? How long does it last?

Exacerbating or relieving factors – Does anything worsen or improve it?

Severity – How bad is the pain?

 

Common types of dental pain

Dental pain is usually acute, unilateral and localised within the mouth.6 It can be exacerbated by thermal or osmotic stimuli or when biting and can present with swelling. Figure 1 indicates where some of the more common conditions that cause dental pain can occur in a tooth.7

Fig 1 - Diagram showing where common painful conditions occur in a molar tooth

Pain exacerbated by thermal or osmotic stimuli

The management of dental pain that worsens with thermal or osmotic stimuli (e.g. sweets or acids) is outlined in Fig. 2. If the patient reports sensitivity or sharp, shooting pain to cold, hot or osmotic stimuli lasting only seconds to minutes, the painful tooth is likely to have an inflamed pulp. This should resolve and is called reversible pulpitis. If the inflammation progresses, the pulp may not be able to heal. This results in irreversible pulpitis. In this case, the patient may report dull or throbbing, poorly localised pain of longer duration.8

Fig 2 - Management of dental pain exacerbated by thermal or osmotic stim

The term dentinal hypersensitivity is used interchangeably with reversible pulpitis as the patient presents with the same symptoms. However, dentinal hypersensitivity is related to exposed dentine.

Occasionally, temporomandibular disorders can arise secondary to pulpitis. This can present as odontogenic and non-odontogenic pain simultaneously.9 There is a lack of evidence for the use of antibiotics to reduce pain associated with irreversible pulpitis and the patient should be advised to seek prompt dental treatment.10

Pain when biting

The management of dental pain from biting is outlined in Fig. 3. When assessing the patient, consider the character and location of the pain. Sharp pain with short duration may be localised to a vital tooth with cracks or dislodged dental restorations.11

Fig 3 - Management of dental pain on biting

When pulp inflammation progresses to pulp necrosis, the symptoms associated with thermal or osmotic stimuli may resolve initially. Dull throbbing pain localised to a tooth with an infected root canal system can then occur when there is inflamed periodontium around the root apex (symptomatic apical peridontitis). Knowing the patient’s history of symptoms and past dental treatment can be useful as pulp inflammation and necrosis usually develop from tooth decay. A patient with a history of root canal therapy can develop symptoms over time if the root canal system remains or becomes re-infected.

Other causes of dull throbbing pain include:

  • food impaction – together with bacterial plaque this can result in gingival inflammation7
  • bruxism (grinding of teeth)
  • temporomandibular disorders
  • oral ulceration
  • periodontal issues with wisdom teeth (pericoronitis) – this may present with continuous pain localised near a wisdom tooth which is exacerbated by eating or brushing
  • acute necrotising ulcerative gingivitis – this results from non-contagious infection of the gums and may present with painful bleeding, ulcerative gingival tissues and halitosis12
  • dry socket (alveolar osteitis) – this may present with pain 1–4 days after tooth extraction so patients should be asked about recent dental treatment. The pain may radiate to the ear, eye or temporal region and be accompanied by halitosis or an unpleasant taste.6

When pain occurs with a temporal pattern (e.g. intermittent pain), it is likely to a have a non-odontogenic cause and the clinician should consider myalgia related to bruxism, cluster headaches or neuropathic pain.13 A patient with nocturnal bruxism may report discomfort, fatigue or pain in the jaw muscles and headache, especially in the morning.14

Pain with swelling

Urgent referral to a dentist is indicated when there is dental pain with swelling. A patient with an acute apical abscess will experience a rapid onset of spontaneous pain, which can sometimes be poorly localised and present with firm or fluctuating swelling in the overlying soft tissues. The tooth is extremely tender when palpated or tapped.15

The symptoms and clinical presentation of a periodontal abscess can be confused with an acute apical abscess. However, pain from a periodontal abscess is usually localised. From the history, the patient may have had previous periodontal treatment, a history of periodontal abscess or a recent soft tissue trauma sustained during eating. On examination, there may be an ovoid swelling in the gingival tissues along the lateral surface of the root.16 Suppuration can present spontaneously or when the abscess is pressed.16 Again, systemic antibiotics are only indicated as an adjunctive treatment when there is systemic involvement or spread of infection, or if adequate drainage cannot be provided.16

Maxillary sinusitis

The symptoms associated with maxillary sinusitis can mimic pain of pulpal origin and vice versa.17 The medical history of a patient with sinusitis may reveal recent upper respiratory tract infection, a history of chronic rhinitis or pain associated with air travel.18 Symptoms can be unilateral or bilateral and are described as a continuous dull pain exacerbated by biting, touch, postural changes or exercise.19 The patient may also have nasal congestion and discharge, headache, facial pain or fullness, erythema over the cheeks and olfactory disturbance.19

Maxillary sinusitis may be suspected to have an odontogenic cause when it does not respond to medical therapy and presents with unilateral symptoms and a history of dental or jaw pain. The patient may have a history of dental caries, periodontal disease or complications with surgery in the posterior maxilla.20 If sinusitis of odontogenic cause is suspected, the patient should be directed to a dentist.

 

Orofacial pain of non-odontogenic origin

Warning signs that can alert the clinician to pain of non-odontogenic origin are listed in the Box.21-24 Knowing the location and timing of the pain can help to differentiate between musculoskeletal, neuropathic, vascular, primary headache or mixed conditions.6

Box - Some features of non‑odontogenic dental pain

  • Bilateral pain or multiple teeth with pain
  • Pain that does not follow a neurological distribution
  • Pain described with unusual characteristics such as burning, stinging, electric, shooting, pins and needles
  • Pain that is chronic and unresponsive to dental treatment
  • Pain not consistently relieved by local anaesthesia
  • Pain concurrent with a headache
  • Pain triggered or exacerbated by palpation of trigger points or muscles of the head and neck
  • Pain associated with clicking or locking of the temporomandibular joints
  • Pain triggered by emotional stress, physical exercise or head position
  • Pain accompanied by psychiatric features such as hallucination or delusions
  • Pain associated with abnormal involuntary movements

Source: references 21-24

Chronic orofacial pain has a non-odontogenic origin and is characterised by painful regional syndromes with a chronic unremitting pattern.25 The most common example is temporomandibular disorders which can present as unilateral or bilateral, continuous or episodic pain.21 The patient may complain of pain in the jaw, temple, inside or in front of the ear, which is modified by jaw movements.22 Fibromyalgia, back pain, chronic fatigue syndrome, depression and headache can be associated with a temporomandibular disorder.23 Clicking, crepitus, pain, trismus or locking of the temporomandibular joints can present with disruption of the disc movement.21 Jaw claudication can potentially be a sign of temporal arteritis and the patient can be referred to an oral maxillofacial surgeon for diagnosis and management.

 

Analgesia

As non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) produce analgesic and anti-inflammatory actions by inhibiting cyclooxygenase enzymes, they are the drug of choice for dental pain. Their efficacy has been well supported by systematic reviews.26 Taking ibuprofen and paracetamol together has been recommended because the combination is more effective than either drug alone.27 If NSAIDs are contraindicated, paracetamol or the combination of paracetamol and oxycodone can be recommended. As opioids result in less analgesia and more adverse effects,27 they are only prescribed, as an adjunct to ibuprofen or paracetamol, at the lowest possible dose and shortest duration.

Administration of a dental block may be effective for initial management of severe pain before follow-up with oral analgesics, especially in an emergency department.

Topical local anaesthetics (e.g. 2% lignocaine gel) are effective for temporary pain relief in patients presenting with oral ulceration or painful oral mucosal conditions. However, the patient should be warned about the risk of further trauma when the oral mucosa is numb.28

 

Indications for antibiotic therapy

Antibiotics are only indicated as an adjunct to definitive treatment when there are systemic signs of infection (fever, malaise, lymphadenopathy, trismus), progressive and rapid spread of infection (cellulitis or Ludwig’s angina) or when the patient is immunocompromised.29 Antibiotics for odontogenic infections include:

  • phenoxymethylpenicillin or amoxicillin
  • amoxicillin with metronidazole
  • amoxicillin with clavulanate or clindamycin.29

If the patient presents with spreading dental infection, systemic sepsis or the risk of airway compromise, they will need immediate referral to the emergency department.

Currently, prophylactic antibiotics are only indicated before dental procedures associated with a high risk of bacteraemia such as surgical procedures including extraction for patients with specific conditions such as prosthetic heart valves, previous infective endocarditis, some congenital heart defects, cardiac transplants with subsequent valvopathy and rheumatic fever with high risk of endocarditis.30

 

Conclusion

Management of dental pain in a medical setting follows specific guidelines for either definitive treatment or to provide relief before referral for dental treatment. Antibiotics are rarely indicated for management of odontogenic infections and are used as adjuncts to dental treatment.

Conflict of interest: none declared

Glossary of dental terms

  • Acute apical abscess – an inflammatory reaction to pulpal infection and necrosis characterised by rapid onset, spontaneous pain, tenderness of the tooth to pressure, pus formation and swelling of associated tissues.
  • Acute necrotising ulcerative gingivitis – an inflammatory disease of the gingiva indicating an impaired host response. Signs and symptoms include pain, interdental papillary necrosis, presence of a pseudomembrane and a tendency towards spontaneous bleeding.
  • Alveolar osteitis – localised inflammation of bone in the alveolus following tooth extraction. Also known as dry socket.
  • Bruxism – involuntary, habitual grinding of teeth, typically during sleep.
  • Irreversible pulpitis – a clinical diagnosis based on subjective and objective findings indicating that the inflamed dental pulp is unable to heal.
  • Pericoronitis – acute inflammation of the gingiva or mucosa surrounding a partially erupted tooth, especially wisdom teeth.
  • Periodontium – the tissues that support the teeth including the gingiva, alveolar mucosa, cementum, periodontal ligament and supporting alveolar bone.
  • Pulp – a richly vascularised and innervated connective tissue of mesenchymal origin in the central space (root canal system) of a tooth.
  • Reversible pulpitis – a clinical diagnosis based on subjective and objective findings indicating that inflammation should resolve, and the pulp will return to normal.
  • Symptomatic apical periodontitis – inflammation and destruction of the apical periodontium causing pain on biting or when touched or tapped.
  • Temporomandibular disorders – a group of disorders involving the masticatory muscles, the temporomandibular joint and associated structures. It can be divided into four main categories of myalgia, arthralgia, intra-articular disorders and headaches.
 

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Aovana Timmerman

Specialist endodontist, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne

Peter Parashos

Chair of Endodontics, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne

Head of Restorative Dentistry, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne