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Old 02-07-2017, 07:40 PM
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Bryanna Bryanna is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Bryanna Bryanna is offline
Grand Magnate
Bryanna's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 4,624
15 yr Member
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Hi Sanjay,

An enucleation is the surgical removal of a mass or tumor in its entirety and without dissecting. Dental cysts associated with root canaled or infected teeth are usually not just one solid mass. They are multiple fibers of tissue that are attached to each other as well as the tooth, the bone, the oral tissue and whatever other tissue may be in that area.

Irrelevant of what type of sedation you have, you will also be given local anesthetic. Depending on the case, some surgeons will use a long acting local anesthetic which could last for many hours after the procedure is done. You will most likely be given oral pain meds right away or as soon as you can have a little something to eat. Post operative pain is not measurable because everyone has a unique situation and their own pain threshold. I've known patients to have very little to no post op pain. Sometimes the pain comes on day 2, 3 or 4. Everyone is different.

No drills are going be used on your cheek bone. That is not the location of any cysts that you have. Your cheekbone is not involved. I cannot tell you if one or two different type drills will be used because the surgeon will determine that at the time of the surgery. The surgical drills are very similar in size and shape to the drills used to work on teeth when doing a cavity removal, etc. They just have a different air exchange within the drill and special surgical burs are used. A drill is only needed when there is no other means to gain access to the cysts or when the bone is beyond salvageable and it needs to be removed.

Sanjay.... where are you getting your other information from?? Are you under the care of an oral maxillofacial surgeon?

Bryanna



Quote:
Originally Posted by SJD001 View Post
Greetings Bryanna,

If I go for enucleation with both General Anesthesia and local anesthesia, then how will be the pain like after I wake up and after the local anesthesia wears-off and when I am under pain medication ?

Also as you can see the image above of the 2 Cysts on my right-upper jaw, the 2nd Cyst is at the posterior and do you think that this will give the surgeon some trouble to operate on ?

Exactly where the drills are done ? And for my 2nd Cyst, the drill seems to be will be on the very thick bone below the eye, is that correct ?

Will there be 2 drills or 1 drill ?

Thanks,

Sanjay
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Bryanna

***I have been in the dental profession for 4 decades. I am an educator and Certified Dental Assistant extensively experienced in chair side assisting and dental radiography. The information that I provide here is my opinion based on my education and professional experience. It is not meant to be taken as medical advice.***
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"Thanks for this!" says:
SJD001 (03-06-2017)