Chapter 01 Pain · Med Emergencies · Trauma · TMD

Patient
Management

The largest combined chapter of the OSCE — covering every patient who walks in with a system to manage, a clock that won't slow down, or a tooth knocked out on a soccer pitch. Two of the highest-yield blocks of the exam (Pain 12% + Medical Emergencies 12%) live here.

~24%
Combined Blueprint
01

TMD & Headache Diagnosis

The diagnosis hinges on whether you hear a click, what direction the jaw deviates, and whether the headache is unilateral. Four TMD subtypes, four headache types — distinct enough that two clinical findings usually nail the answer.

Figure 1.1

Disc displacement: click present?

Patient opens mouth → click on opening? YES (clicks) Disc displacement WITH reduction Reciprocal click · normal opening May see brief deviation NO (silent) Disc displacement WITHOUT reduction Limited opening · hard end-feel Deflection to affected side

The four TMD subtypes

DiagnosisPainSoundsOpeningTreatment
Myofascial PainMuscle tender, TMJ not tender, trigger pointsNoneLimited by pain — assisted opening > activeNSAID, heat, physio, bite plate, soft diet, muscle relaxant
DD with reductionSometimes — TMJ tenderReciprocal click (open + close)Normal · brief deviationNSAID, heat (or cold if acute), physio, bite plate
DD without reductionCommon, especially acuteNone (disc stuck anteriorly)Limited · hard end-feel · deflection to affected sideSame · TMJ surgery if refractory
OsteoarthritisActivity-related, moderateCrepitus (grinding)Limited · brief morning stiffness < 30 minNSAID, cold, physio, bite plate · CBCT shows flattened condyle

Headaches — four shapes

Migraine Unilateral

Throbbing/pulsating with aura (lights, vision loss), nausea, photophobia. Triggered by hormones, stress, or TMD pain.

Mgmt: NSAID/analgesic. Investigation if red flags or atypical aura.

Tension-type Bilateral

Squeezing, pressure-mild/moderate, like a tight band around the head.

Mgmt: NSAID, heat, physio, psychotherapy. TCAs for chronic prophylaxis.

Sleep-apnea headache Bilateral

Dull pressure-type on waking, resolves within hours.

Mgmt: Sleep study; CPAP for OSA.

Cluster Unilateral

Stabbing, around the eye + temporal region, lasts up to 3 h. Triggered by alcohol, smoking.

Mgmt: 100% O₂, triptans, ± neurology referral.

M
Memory Hook · "BUSH" — bilateral + headache Band-like = Tension · Upon-waking = Sleep apnea · Stabbing = Cluster · Half-head = Migraine.
02

Dental & In-Office Emergencies

Nine emergencies — and one universal first instinct: position + oxygen. Memorize the one exception: hyperventilation. Cupped hands, no oxygen.

First-3-seconds protocol

The conscious-patient default.

Almost every conscious-patient response in this list opens the same way. Train it as one motion.

  1. Position. Supine + feet elevated for syncope/most. Upright for hyperventilation, asthma, anaphylaxis.
  2. Oxygen. Default yes. Skip only for hyperventilation.
  3. Specific drug. Glucose, salbutamol, epinephrine, nitroglycerin — one per emergency.
  4. Call 911 if patient unconscious, anaphylaxis, MI, CVA, severe asthma after Salbutamol failure.
RESPOND OFFICE PROTOCOL 1. POSITION 2. O₂ 3. DRUG 4. 911

The nine emergencies

01

Syncope

↓ BP · ↓ HR · ↑ Resp

Most common in-office emergency. Pre: cold sweat, nausea. Syncope: dizzy, tachy > 120. Recovery: rapid once supine.

Conscious Supine + feet elevated · O₂.
Unconscious Same + head-tilt/chin-lift.
02

Cardiac Arrest

No pulse · cyanosis

Unresponsive, no pulse.

Sequence Assess responsiveness · Shout/911 · Supine · CPR · AED.
03

Hyperventilation

↑ Resp up to 60/min

"Tightness in chest", SOB, dry mouth — can mimic MI.

Mgmt Upright · breathe into cupped hands. ⚠ NO oxygen.
04

Anxiety attack

↑ HR · trembling

Sudden terror, palpitations, sweating, paresthesia.

Mgmt O₂ + reassurance. Plan future visits with sedation (oral lorazepam, N₂O, or IV midazolam).
05

Airway Obstruction

Choking sign · Cyanosis

Partial: cough/wheeze. Complete: universal choking sign. Phase 1 < 2 min, phase 2 LOC, phase 3 cardiac arrest.

Conscious Sit/lean · finger sweep if visible · abdominal thrusts (chest if pregnant/obese).
Unconscious Supine + 911 + CPR.
06

Epinephrine reaction

HR 140-160 · ↑ BP

Sharp BP rise, tremor, dizziness, headache after LA.

Mgmt O₂ · monitor.
07

Mild allergic reaction

Skin only

Itching, flushing, nausea, rhinitis. Typically Type IV (delayed) or contact dermatitis.

Mgmt Diphenhydramine.
08

Anaphylaxis

Multi-system · ↓ BP

Skin → eye/oral → GI cramps → bronchoconstriction → cardiovascular collapse.

Conscious Upright · 911 · epinephrine · O₂ · then diphenhydramine + hydrocortisone.
Unconscious Supine + 911 + epinephrine + O₂.
09

LA toxicity

Mild→severe progression

Talkative + slurred + metallic taste + tremor → tonic-clonic seizures + CNS depression.

Mild O₂ + vitals.
Convulsing 911 + clear instruments + protect.
Unconscious 911 + CPR (maintain airway).
!
Trap · Hyperventilation Do NOT give oxygen. The patient is already hyperoxygenated; cupped hands let them rebreathe CO₂. This is the only conscious emergency where O₂ is wrong.
M
Memory Hook · The default opener Position + Oxygen + (specific drug) + Call 911. Universal except hyperventilation. Train it as one motion.
03

Medical Conditions & Defer Thresholds

When does elective treatment have to wait? Each condition has a numeric threshold or time window the OSCE expects you to know cold.

Always-defer thresholds

Hypertension

≥ 180/110

Defer elective tx. Hypertensive crisis: O₂ + 911. Always take pre-op BP.

Recent MI

< 30 days

Defer elective. After 30 days: minimize epi, avoid prolonged NSAID, schedule morning, sedation OK.

Recent CVA

< 6 months

Defer elective. If on warfarin: check INR; avoid aspirin/NSAID.

End-stage CKD

GFR < 15

Hospital setting only. Avoid NSAIDs and tetracyclines at all stages of severe CKD.

Kidney transplant

< 6 months

Defer elective. Avoid NSAIDs for 6 months post-transplant.

Active TB / COVID

Active disease

Defer elective. Active COVID emergency tx only at end of day.

By organ system — drug + dental considerations

System / DiseaseAvoidDental considerations
HypertensionProlonged NSAIDs · Erythromycin/Clarithromycin if β-blockerMinimize epi · morning appt · sedation OK · pre-op BP
Ischemic / CHDNSAIDs if on antiplatelet · Erythromycin/Clari if Ca-blocker · Nitroglycerin if Viagra/CialisSame as HTN
Congestive heart failureNSAIDs · Erythromycin/Clari/Acetaminophen if on DigoxinSame as HTN
Cardiac arrhythmiaNSAIDs if on antiplatelet · Macrolides (QT)Minimize epi
AsthmaNSAIDs if persistent · Erythromycin/Clari if on theophyllineMorning appt · sedation OK
COPDN₂O · Opioids · Erythromycin/Clari if on theophyllineMorning appt · sedation OK
DiabetesAspirin/NSAID if on sulfonylureaMorning appt · glucometer: < 3.9 give glucose, < 11 defer
Adrenal insufficiencyMorning · sedation OK · supplemental corticosteroids · pre-op BP
Peptic ulcer / Crohn's / GERDNSAIDs / AspirinGERD: treat at 45° angle
HepatitisCoordinate with physicianSymptomatic: defer · end-stage: hospital
CirrhosisOpioids · Amide LAMedical consult
EpilepsyAvoid orthostatic HPT · pre-op BP · sedation if poorly controlled
CKD GFR 15-30NSAIDs · tetracyclinesMedical consult
M
Memory Hook · "NSAID-NO list" Anticoagulants · bleeding disorders · severe asthma · heart failure · peptic ulcer/GERD/Crohn's · kidney disease · kidney transplant · prior MI · lithium use · pregnancy 3rd trimester.
!
Trap · Erythromycin / Clarithromycin patients Avoid in patients on β-blockers, Ca-blockers, digoxin, theophylline, statins, warfarin. Default to azithromycin — fewer interactions.
04

Tooth Trauma — Adult & Primary

Six injury patterns, each with its own splint window. Primary teeth are different — and one rule is absolute: never reimplant a primary avulsion.

Figure 4.1

Splint times — adult permanent teeth

Subluxation
2 wk
  • Flexible splint if mobility
Extrusion
2 wk
  • + 4 wk if alveolar #
Avulsion
2 wk
  • If reimplant < 60 min
Lateral Lux
4 wk
  • Reposition first
Intrusion
4 wk
  • Surgical reposition if > 3 mm
Root #
4 wk*
  • Apical/middle 1/3
  • *4 mo if cervical 1/3

Adult tooth trauma — full table

InjuryPulp / MobilityRadiographTreatment
ConcussionPulp+ · normal mobility · non-displacedNoneObserve 1 yr. Necrosis: RCT (mature) or apexification/regen (immature).
SubluxationPulp− likely · ↑ mobility · non-displaced · sulcus bleedNoneObserve. Flexible splint 2 wk if mobile.
Lateral luxationPulp− likely · immobile · displaced · alveolar #↑ PDLReposition + flexible splint 4 wk. Endo within 2-3 wk if mature.
IntrusionPulp− likely · immobile · infra-occludedAbsent PDL · CEJ apicalImmature: re-erupt 8 wk. Mature: surgical reposition + flexible splint 4 wk. Endo within 2-3 wk if mature.
ExtrusionPulp− likely · ↑ mobility · displaced incisally↑ PDL apicallyReposition + flexible splint 2 wk (+4 if alveolar #).
AvulsionTooth out of mouthReimplant < 60 min · flexible splint 2 wk · antibiotic (amox; clinda/doxy if PCN allergy) · CHX 0.12% bid × 2 wk · endo within 2-3 wk (mature). Open apex: same minus RCT, regen if necrotic.

Primary tooth trauma

InjuryTreatment
Concussion / SubluxationObserve + CHX rinse.
ExtrusionIf non-interfering with occlusion → spontaneous repositioning. If > 3 mm or excessively mobile → extract.
Lateral luxationMild: spontaneous. Severe: reposition + flexible splint 4 wk.
IntrusionObserve — allow spontaneous repositioning. Always radiograph to check successor.
AvulsionDo NOT reimplant. Radiograph to confirm no fragments. CHX rinse.
!
Trap · Primary avulsion Never reimplant a primary tooth — the bony socket sits adjacent to the developing permanent successor and reimplantation can damage it. Always reimplant a permanent avulsion ASAP if < 60 min and stored in milk/saliva/saline.
Universal trauma adjunct Chlorhexidine 0.12% rinse twice daily for 1-2 weeks. Almost every trauma case answer ends with this.
05

Tooth Fractures

Crown · Crown-Root · Root · Alveolar. Treatment escalates with depth and pulp involvement.

Figure 5.1

Fracture zones & treatment escalation

CEJ ENAMEL DENTIN CEJ ZONE CERVICAL ⅓ MIDDLE ⅓ APICAL ⅓ FRACTURE TYPE → TREATMENT Enamel only Smooth · or bond fragment if available Enamel + Dentin (no pulp) Composite · or bond fragment Enamel + Dentin + Pulp exposed Direct cap (small) or partial pulpotomy Crown-root (with/without pulp) Stabilize → comprehensive · maybe extract Root # · cervical ⅓ Reposition + flexible splint 4 months Root # · middle / apical ⅓ Reposition + flexible splint 4 weeks Alveolar fracture Reposition + flexible splint 4 weeks

Adult fractures — quick reference

TypeTreatment
Enamel craze / infractionObserve; restore if severe
Enamel onlyBond fragment if available; or recontour + composite
Enamel-Dentin (no pulp)Bond fragment or composite (small < 0.5 mm) covering exposed dentin
Enamel-Dentin + pulpDirect cap or partial pulpotomy (depending on size). Bond fragment or restore.
Crown-root no pulpEmergency: stabilize to neighbours. Definitive: comprehensive tx.
Crown-root + pulpEmergency: stabilize. Definitive: immature → partial pulpotomy + restore. Mature → RCT + restore. Non-restorable → extract.
Root fractureReposition coronal. Apical/middle 1/3 → flexible splint 4 wk. Cervical 1/3 → splint up to 4 mo. Future necrosis → endo of coronal segment only.
Alveolar fractureReposition + flexible splint 4 wk. Endo if necrosis.