Clinical practice guidelines: Oral health care for children and adults living with epidermolysis bullosa
Artículo
Open/ Download
Access note
Acceso Abierto
Publication date
2020Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Kramer Strenger, Susanne Marie
Cómo citar
Clinical practice guidelines: Oral health care for children and adults living with epidermolysis bullosa
Author
- Kramer Strenger, Susanne Marie;
- Lucas, James;
- Gamboa Arellano, Francisca;
- Penarrocha, Diago, Miguel;
- Penarrocha Oltra, David;
- Guzmán Letelier, Marcelo;
- Paul, Sanchit;
- Molina, Gustavo;
- Sepúlveda Vega, Lorena;
- Araya Cabello, Ignacio;
- Soto Galaz, Rubén;
- Arriagada Vargas, Carolina;
- Lucky, Anne W.;
- Mellerio, Jemima E.;
- Cornwall, Roger;
- Alsayer, Fatimah;
- Schilke, Reinhard;
- Antal, Mark Adam;
- Castrillón, Fernanda;
- Paredes, Camila;
- Serrano, María Concepción;
- Clark, Victoria;
Abstract
Background: Inherited epidermolysis bullosa (EB) is a genetic disorder characterized by skin fragility and unique oral features.
Aims: To provide (a) a complete review of the oral manifestations in those living with each type of inherited EB, (b) the current best practices for managing oral health care of people living with EB, (c) the current best practices on dental implant-based oral rehabilitation for patients with recessive dystrophic EB (RDEB), and (d) the current best practice for managing local anesthesia, principles of sedation, and general anesthesia for children and adults with EB undergoing dental treatment.
Methods: Systematic literature search, panel discussion including clinical experts and patient representatives from different centers around the world, external review, and guideline piloting.
Results: This article has been divided into five chapters: (i) general information on EB for the oral health care professional, (ii) systematic literature review on the oral manifestations of EB, (iii) oral health care and dental treatment for children and adults living with EB-clinical practice guidelines, (iv) dental implants in patients with RDEB-clinical practice guidelines, and (v) sedation and anesthesia for adults and children with EB undergoing dental treatment-clinical practice guidelines. Each chapter provides recommendations on the management of the different clinical procedures within dental practice, highlighting the importance of patient-clinician partnership, impact on quality of life, and the importance of follow-up appointments. Guidance on the use on nonadhesive wound care products and emollients to reduce friction during patient care is provided.
Conclusions: Oral soft and hard tissue manifestations of inherited EB have unique patterns of involvement associated with each subtype of the condition. Understanding each subtype individually will help the professionals plan longterm treatment approaches.
Patrocinador
DEBRA UK
Indexation
Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Quote Item
Spec Care Dentist. 2020;40:3–81
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item:
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Azizkhan, Richard G.; Denyer, Jacqueline E.; Mellerio, Jemima E.; González, Robinson; Bacigalupo, Magdalena; Kantor, Arturo; Passalacqua, Gianfranco; Palisson, Francis; Lucky, Anne W. (Blackwell Science, 2007)
-
Rodíguez, Fernando A.; Gana, María José; Yubero, María Joao; Zillmann Geerdts, Gisela del Carmen; Krämer Strenger, Susanne; Catalán, Javiera; Rubio Astudillo, Julia; González, Sergio; Liu, Lu; Ozoemena, Linda; Mellerio, Jemima M.; McGrath, John A.; Palisson, Francis; Conget, Paulette (Elsevier, 2012-02)
-
Catalán, Javiera A.; Rodríguez, Fernando A.; Yubero, María J.; Palisson, Francis; Gana, María J.; Krämer, Susanne M.; Repetto, Gabriela M. (2012)Background Down syndrome (DS) is the most common autosomal chromosomal disorder. Epidermolysis bullosa (EB) is a rare genodermatosis characterized by skin and mucous membrane fragility, with formation of blisters and ...