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Oral surgery


Perioperative use of corticosteroids has been advocated for reduction of pain, edema, and trismus following oral surgical procedures.


Lasers have been used for many years in oral surgery and implant dentistry. In some indications, laser treatment has become state of the art as compared to conventional techniques. 


This study assessed the risk associated with several schedules of perioperative treatment with coumadin in anticoagulated patients who underwent oral surgery.


The purpose of this study was to identify factors that may contribute to anxiety of patients undergoing minor oral surgery before and after the operation.


Laser technology has been recently introduced into the dental field with the idea to replace drilling.


Surgery is the main oral healthcare hazard to the patient with a bleeding tendency, which is mostly caused by the use of anticoagulants


Self-inflicted gingival injuries typically occur in patients with psychological disorders and rarely in normal individuals


Primary intraoral melanoma is a rare neoplasm with a poor prognosis, accounting for 1% to 8% of all melanoma in Europe and the United States.


Following the development of the ruby laser by Maiman in 1960, the Nd:YAG laser, the Co2 laser, the semiconductor laser, the He-Ne laser, excimer lasers, the argon laser, and finally the Er:YAG laser...


Electrosurgery is an application of electrically generated heat energy to tissue to alter it for therapeutic purposes


The aim of this systematic review was to analyze the dental literature regarding accuracy and clinical application in computer-guided template-based implant dentistry.


Research led by George Hajishengallis of Penn Dental sheds light on an aging-related condition that drives inflammation in older populations.


This case report highlights the rare association among a dental procedure, infective endocarditis, and an acute ischemic stroke.


A postsurgical ciliated cyst (PSCC) is an epithelial cyst that usually develops in the maxilla, although in rare cases, it can affect the mandible or other facial bones. 


Stafne's bone defect is a developmental anatomic bone defect in the lingual side of the mandible in the area of the mandibular angle that is filled with proliferation or translocation of adjacent...


Dental autotransplantation (AT) is defined as the transplantation of a tooth from one site to a different site in the oral cavity of the same individual. 


Autologous bone was the first material to be used as a graft for this procedure and has long been considered the gold standard, due to its osteoconductive, osteoinductive and osteogenic properties....


In the dental sector, more than 10 million teeth are extracted worldwide every year. Among the most common complications that occur following tooth extractions are pain, swelling and trismus,...


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