1. A study of the effectiveness of xylocaine as a local anesthetic agent in dentistry
- Author
-
Leonard Robinson and Joseph P. Lazansky
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Clinical effectiveness ,Local anesthetic ,medicine.drug_class ,Postoperative pain ,Lidocaine ,Surgical procedures ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Surgery ,Procaine ,Anesthesiology ,Dentistry ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Humans ,Anesthetics, Local ,business ,General Dentistry ,Depth of anesthesia ,Anesthesia, Local ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effectiveness of Xylocaine as a local anesthetic agent has been studied (1) by measuring tooth response to graded electrical stimulation. and (2) by observing clinical effectiveness in dental surgical procedures. From these studies, the following conclusions are justified: 1. 1. Xylocaine produces a more profound anesthesia than does procaine. Since rapidity of action, spread, and duration of anesthesia may be a function of depth of anesthesia, any conclusions concerning these factors are limited to the volumes and concentrations used in this particular study. 2. 2. The onset of anesthesia is more rapid with Xylocaine than with procaine. 3. 3. The spread of anesthesia is greater with Xylocaine. 4. 4. Duration of anesthesia is longer with Xylocaine. 5. 5. No differences were noted in blood pressures, pulse, amount of pain, bleeding, and the number of untoward incidents at operation, nor in the amount of postoperative pain.
- Published
- 1949
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