Antibiotics Prescription In Dental Implants: Salutary Or Grievous A Cross Sectional Observational Study

Research Article
Swyeta Jain Gupta., Amit Gupta., Poonam Deshmukh., Vivek Gautam., Aamir Ahsan and Tarique Anwar
DOI: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.24327/ijrsr.2018.0906.2212
Subject: 
Medicine
KeyWords: 
Antibiotics, Dental Implants, Cross Sectional Study
Abstract: 

Background: In oral implantology, there is no consensus on the most appropriate regimen for antibiotics prescribing, the decision to prescribe antibiotic is usually based on procedure, patient and clinician related factors. The aim of this study was to investigate the rationale of antibiotic prescribing among Indian clinicians who practice oral implantology. Findings: The target sample for the study was the 170 Dental Implant Practitioners A five page questionnaire contained 41 questions, both closed and open questions were used to collect data. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS Windows software. Descriptive statistics were generated. The response rate was (70.4%) 176/250. Mean age was 37.2 yrs, 49.4% always prescribe antibiotics mainly oral amoxicillin and amoxicillin with clavulinic acid. Antibiotics prescribing increased with flap raising, multiple implants and sinus or bone augmentation. Patient medical condition, Periodontitis and oral hygiene were the most important clinical factors in antibiotic prescribing, non-clinical factors were; reading scientific materials, courses and lectures, knowledge gained during training, and the effectiveness and previous experience with the drug. Conclusions: Wide variations in antibiotics types, routes, dose and duration of administration were found. Recommendations on antibiotic prescribing are needed to prevent antibiotic overprescribing and misuse