Dental care may benefit patients scheduled for cancer surgery
Of 509,179 patients studied, 16% received preoperative oral care
from a dentist. When a surgeon requested that a dentist provide
preoperative oral care to a patient with cancer, the dentist checked the
patient's oral condition, provided professional tooth cleaning, taught
the patient self-cleaning methods for the teeth, and provided any
treatment needed.
In the study, 15,724 patients (3.09%) developed postoperative pneumonia and 1734 (0.34%) died within 30 days of surgery. After adjustments, preoperative oral care by a dentist was linked with a decrease in postoperative pneumonia (3.28% versus 3.76%) and death within 30 days (0.30% versus 0.42%).
"The findings could help improve strategies for the prevention of postoperative complications," the authors wrote.
In the study, 15,724 patients (3.09%) developed postoperative pneumonia and 1734 (0.34%) died within 30 days of surgery. After adjustments, preoperative oral care by a dentist was linked with a decrease in postoperative pneumonia (3.28% versus 3.76%) and death within 30 days (0.30% versus 0.42%).
"The findings could help improve strategies for the prevention of postoperative complications," the authors wrote.
###
Comments