Hi, thank you for taking my question. I am a
femaleCondoms
Female condoms
Female sexual dysfunction,early 40's, history of MVP (moderate), mild MR, redundant leaflets per echo and TEE.
I've always premedicated before dental procedures. Tomorrow I am having endodontic treatment on a bicuspid. When I asked if I need to premedicate, the endodontist said to check with my cardio because he thought the guidelines from the Heart association have changed. The nurse at the cardio office said according to my chart I need to premedicate. I was unable to speak to the Dr.
My question is: Have the guidelines for premedication changed and when was this? Also, what is the antibiotic of choice to use if I am allergic to pennicillen? I've tried
ClindamycinClindamycin
Clindamycin hydrochloride
Clindamycin phosphate
Clindamycin topical
Clindamycin, topical
Clindamycin, vaginal
Clindamycin-benzoyl peroxide topical
Clindamycin-tretinoin topical, but have difficulty tolerating it.
Thank you for your time.
Uptowngirl
As a dentist, I follow these guidelines strictly, unless superceded by a physician. In the event that their recommendations do not coincide with the AHA recommendations, I will alert them to this. Sometimes they still want their patients to premed, and in that case we do, but the bottom line is this: you have just as much of a chance at having an adverse reaction to the antibiotic as you do having the antibiotic do you any good at all. Not to mention, microbial resistance to antibiotics is always a concern. You should not just use them to use them.
I have not looked, but the ADA website should have the latest recommendations online. Look there for a full listing of the drugs of choice and specific conditions and procedures involved. Amox 2g 1 hr pripr to visit is the gold standard as previously stated...but there are several acceptable regimines.