Authors : Dr. Anand. B; Dr. Santana; Dr. Shakthivel. S; Dr. Kumari. M; Dr. Gayathri.V.S; Dr. Sai Charan. K.V;
Volume/Issue : Volume 6 - 2021, Issue 9 - September
Google Scholar : http://bitly.ws/gu88
Scribd : https://bit.ly/3j8BhJp
Pain is one of the most common reason for the
patients to visit the dentist. The pain may be due to
diseases or conditions of dental, oral, facial, and related
structures(1,6). It is the dentist’s responsibility to
diagnose the cause of pain. Pain during a dental
procedure is well managed by sufficient local
anaesthesia, while postoperative pain control is often
insufficient due to inadequate pain relief or unacceptable
side-effects(2). The most common and widely used drugs
in management of pain in dentistry are NSAIDs for
their analgesic, anti-inflammatory and anti-pyretic
actions. This article intends to discuss the rationale in
prescribing NSAIDs in dental practice in a concise
way.(3)
Keywords : NSAIDS, pain, analgesic, cyclooxygenase, prostaglandin, acetaminophen, dentistry, dental pain