Archive for September, 2010

Donald Wilcox Phoenix Cosmetic Dentist New Staff Photo

Friday, September 24th, 2010

Phoenix Cosmetic Dentist Donald Wilcox is joined here by his staff in this wonderful photo.

His staff is composed of long-term, highly skilled professionals dedicated to providing you with the best in patient care. From your first communication with us, you will experience our commitment to one on one, personal attention. This extends beyond your visit with us, as we will follow-up with you to ensure you are satisfied with us and your dental work.

Memebers of his staff include: Kimberly his certified dental assistant, Donna his hygienist, Shelley who works the front desk, Evelyn Wieser who is a receptionist and works in the front office.  More details will be posted about the rest of his staff.

Your First Time at the Dentist

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

“For some people who are apprehensive about having their dentistry done…  We have some people who are just so apprehensive they can’t even come into the office or need someone to come with them.  That’s fine, sometimes first visits we only just sit down and talk a little bit, before going into the dental treatment.  If people are so apprehensive that they can’t undergo preliminary looking and a couple of radiographs to see what their problem is whether it be sleep apnea or other situations, that even can be done under sedation dentistry.  We go with whatever pace the person can go at.  As far as the actual process once we are ready to do dentistry, we usually give the patient some medication for the night before.  Just so they sleep better, because often times they are worried about the procedure days in advance and they have trouble sleeping.  It helps to get a good nights sleep the night before so the body is properly rested which helps the body to be sedated.  They will come to the office we will give them some medication here at the office and monitor them with a pulse monitor which manages their blood pressure and heart rate.   It’s always a little unpredictable how much medication someones going to take to get to a comfortable level, so we promise people we aren’t going to start them until they are at that level.  With oral sedation it is a little slower onset then iv or general anesthetic but what we usually do is crush the medication and place it in the tongue, there is lots of blood vessels so it gets picked up pretty quickly.  During the procedure we monitor them and add medication if need be so that they are comfortable throughout the procedure.  And then they will need someone to drive them home, they will be walking on their own when they leave, but their memory.. the medication tends to stay around for a few hours.. so we want someone to take them home and take care of them.”

First Time to Sedation Dentist

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

For some of the people who are apprehensive about having their dentistry done we have some people who are just so apprehensive that they can’t even come in to the office or they need to have someone come with them. That’s fine for the first visit to our Sedation Dentistry Office we will only do, sometimes the first visit we only sit down and talk to them and we haven’t even got into the dental treatment or anything like that. If people are so apprehensive that they can’t under go some preliminary looking and maybe a couple of radiographs just to see what there problems is and that can even be done under sedation.

So we go at whatever pace the person can go at but as far as the as the actual process once we get ready to do the dentistry we give the patient some medication to take the night before just so they sleep better because often they are worried about this procedure days in advance and have troubles sleeping so the body is better sedated and go through the procedure if they have had a good night sleep the night before. They will come to the office, Desert Smiles,  and will give them some medication here and monitor them with a pulse oximeter which measures the blood pressure, heart rate and that sort of thing and it’s always a little unpredictable how much medication someone’s going to take to get to a very comfortable level and we promise people that we are not going to start on them until we get them to that level.

With the oral sedation that’s a little slower onset then like an iv or general anesthetic but what we can do is crush the medication and place it underneath the tongue there’s lots of big blood vessel there so it gets picked up pretty quickly. During the procedure we monitor them if add medication if need be so they stay comfortable during the day and then they are going to need somebody to drive them home.

What is Sleep Apnea?

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Well, sleep apnea is a medical condition so dentists are not qualified to diagnose it, it’s a medical diagnoses but we often times can help greatly in the treatment. One of the biggest cause of sleep apnea is our closing of the airway while we are asleep and apnea is really a breath not breathing for more then ten seconds.

What is that? When we lie down and go to sleep and the tissues in the roof of our mouths relax and the biggest culprit of the airway tend to close and tongue relaxes and tends to drop back farther in the throat. What we do as dentists is we make appliances for our patients that they can wear, they help keep the lower jaw in position and tongue in position to keep it from dropping back and clogging up the airway. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine for mild to moderate levels of apnea for simple snoring recommends the dental devices as the first choice of treatment.

The CPAP has been the standard of treatment for sleep apnea forever and is still the best treatment possible and especially for those with severe levels. Many people maybe sixty percent or more of people that are diagnosed and placed on a CPAP aren’t able to wear it successfully for a variety of reasons so dental appliances compliances are very high because they are much more comfortable and in severe cases another thing we are doing more of is called co-therapy where were using the dental appliances to sort of stabilize the jaw and the airway using the CPAP with it and your able to turn down the pressures of the CPAP and it’s a lot more comfortable and easier for people to wear it in a severe condition.

Ways To Monitor Sleep Apnea

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

A study device we have here at the office is called that watch pat, it’s pretty comfortable to sleep with. When you go to sleep lab there is a multitude number of things you are hooked up to, fifteen to eighteen different leads and it’s a foreign environment. The nice thing about the ambulatory is that your sleeping in your own bed, you have your own routine, it just wraps around your wrist and around your finger and you can have your own microphone placed on your chest. So most people find that can sleep much more normal with that than in a sleep study.

Obviously, if you have any symptoms such as snoring your bed partner says that they see you not breathe or gasp at night are all very common symptoms of sleep apnea. More and more research is being done all the time the link between sleep apnea and other dieses probably the first one and the most commonly is:

  • Hyper tension almost every patient that we see has sleep apnea you look on the health history has hyper tension which is a tremendous link with that along with more severe cardiac symptoms such as stroke and heart attack and that sort of thing.
  • Diabetes has a very big comorbidity with sleep apnea but the statistics become more and more of the relationship it and the overall health.
  • Weight gain is another big one with sleep apnea..gastric reflux, etc. There is just getting to be a longer and longer list all the time.
  • Also people who just don’t feel refreshed or tend to be sleepy at work, those kinds of things, sometimes those are a big tip off that there is going to be something going on.