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Assessment of Oral Health–Related Quality of Life Before and After Third Molar Surgery

Authors :
Mary F. Stavropoulos
Raymond P. White
Michael A. Gentile
Phillip T. Fleuchaus
Ceib Phillips
Shawn M. Conrad
Gary D. Slade
Daniel A. Shugars
Nazir Ahmad
Source :
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. 64:1721-1730
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2006.

Abstract

Purpose This study was designed to further our understanding of recovery after third molar surgery by using 2 instruments to measure quality of life outcomes, the more global Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14), and the condition-specific Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) instrument. Patients and Methods Clinical and quality of life data pre- and postsurgery from 63 patients with all 4 third molars below the occlusal plane, treated with topical minocycline during third molar surgery to reduce the incidence of delayed clinical healing, were available for analyses. Each patient was given 2 questionnaires to complete; the more global OHIP-14 and the HRQOL instrument designed to assess recovery after third molar surgery. Prevalence, Extent, and Severity of the OHIP-14 scores were calculated presurgery and for postsurgery days (PSD) 1, 7, 14. The percentage of patients reporting clinically relevant responses detrimental to quality of life from the condition-specific HRQOL instrument were reported for the same time frame. Results Study patients were most likely female, less than 25 years old, and Caucasian. Most (72%) had bone removed from both lower third molars. Median surgery time was 27 minutes (interquartile range [IQ], 20, 40 minutes.). Median surgeons’ estimate of overall difficulty was 14 of a possible 28 (IQ 10, 18), and the median degree of difficulty for lower third molars was 8 of 14 (IQ 6, 10). Few patients (only 10%) had delayed clinical healing. Prevalence for all OHIP-14 items, percent of patients reporting items “fairly often” or “very often,” were increased from presurgery on PSD 1 and then decreased on PSD 7 and PSD 14. OHIP-14 Severity scores, the sum of OHIP-14 responses, followed the same pattern as the Prevalence scores. OHIP-14 Severity scores on PSD 1 were 27 (IQ 16, 34), decreasing to 8 (IQ 3, 13) by PSD 7, and 1 (IQ 0, 5) by PSD 14. Recovery for outcomes addressed by both instruments followed a similar pattern and time course. However, each instrument also assessed distinctly different outcomes, adding information that could not be obtained by 1 instrument alone. Conclusion Complementary instruments to measure quality of life outcomes provide a broader understanding of recovery after third molar surgery.

Details

ISSN :
02782391
Volume :
64
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2ba3bfb2ec7574ff7cb4c47497b813d5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joms.2006.03.052