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Don't miss out on your RACE-approved CEβcompletely free. Strengthen your veterinary dentistry skills with practical, case-based training you can apply immediately in practice. Visit: https://ivdi.org/free
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Host: Dr. Brett Beckman, DVM, FAVD, DAVDC, DAAPM Guest: Annie Mills, LVT
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This week's episode answers some of the most common and clinically relevant veterinary dentistry questions submitted during recent online trainings. Annie Mills shares practical guidance for general practice teams on anesthesia management, patient warming, dental recovery protocols, pain management, and technician involvement in advanced dental workflows.
The discussion begins with strategies for preventing hypothermia during lengthy dental procedures, including how to maximize thermal support in small patients undergoing advanced periodontal treatment and full mouth extractions. Annie explains why maintaining body temperature directly impacts recovery quality and anesthetic safety, especially in cats and small breed dogs.
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What You'll Learn in This Episode π― How to prevent hypothermia during long veterinary dental procedures π― Why warm IV fluids improve anesthetic recovery π― How full-body warming systems support patient temperature stability π― When full mouth extractions may need to be staged π― Which anesthetic parameters guide intraoperative decision-making π― Why lighter anesthesia planes are preferred during oral surgery π― How dental nerve blocks reduce inhalant anesthetic requirements π― Whether veterinary dental patients should be fed before discharge π― Why post-operative pain medication remains essential after extractions π― How veterinary technicians can assist with dental charting and pathology recognition π― Why anxious patients may benefit from modified intake and recovery protocols π― Why even routine prophylaxis patients often require pain management planning
Key Veterinary Dentistry Takeaways π Maintaining body temperature is critical for safe anesthesia and smoother recovery in veterinary dental patients π Warm IV fluids and dual-sided warming systems can significantly reduce intraoperative hypothermia π Most full mouth extraction patients can safely complete procedures without staging when properly monitored π Patient temperature, blood pressure, and anesthetic depth should guide procedural decisions in real time π Nerve blocks allow clinicians to maintain lighter anesthesia planes during advanced oral surgery π Veterinary technicians play an important role in identifying obvious pathology and initiating dental charting π Dental radiographs help technicians recognize extraction sites, tooth resorption, and missing or unerupted teeth π Reducing patient anxiety improves recovery quality and client satisfaction π Pain management protocols should assume underlying pathology exists until proven otherwise π Routine prophylaxis patients frequently require treatment beyond simple cleaning once diagnostics are completed
Questions This Episode Answers β How can veterinary teams prevent hypothermia during dental procedures? β Why are warm IV fluids helpful during anesthesia? β When should full mouth extractions be staged? β What temperature changes may require aborting a procedure? β Should veterinary dental patients be fed before discharge? β Are post-operative pain medications always necessary after extractions? β Why are lighter anesthesia planes preferred during oral surgery? β How do nerve blocks improve anesthetic safety? β Can veterinary technicians perform dental charting? β What pathology should technicians recognize on dental radiographs? β How can practices reduce anxiety in veterinary dental patients? β Why do even routine prophylaxis patients often require pain management?
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Ready to take your dentistry skills further? π FREE 1 CE Course: https://ivdi.org/free Sign up for the newsletter for weekly clinical insights
π¦· Live & Online Veterinary Dental Courses https://veterinarydentistry.net/
π οΈ Dr. Brett's Trusted Equipment & Instruments https://drbrettspets.com/
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veterinary dental anesthesia, veterinary dental hypothermia, veterinary dentistry recovery protocols, full mouth extractions dogs, veterinary dental nerve blocks, veterinary dental pain management, veterinary technician dental charting, veterinary dental radiographs, anesthesia monitoring veterinary dentistry, veterinary oral surgery recovery, veterinary dentistry CE course, veterinary dental warming techniques, small dog anesthesia dentistry, feline dental anesthesia, veterinary dentistry Q&A
By Brett Beckman5
3333 ratings
Don't miss out on your RACE-approved CEβcompletely free. Strengthen your veterinary dentistry skills with practical, case-based training you can apply immediately in practice. Visit: https://ivdi.org/free
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Host: Dr. Brett Beckman, DVM, FAVD, DAVDC, DAAPM Guest: Annie Mills, LVT
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This week's episode answers some of the most common and clinically relevant veterinary dentistry questions submitted during recent online trainings. Annie Mills shares practical guidance for general practice teams on anesthesia management, patient warming, dental recovery protocols, pain management, and technician involvement in advanced dental workflows.
The discussion begins with strategies for preventing hypothermia during lengthy dental procedures, including how to maximize thermal support in small patients undergoing advanced periodontal treatment and full mouth extractions. Annie explains why maintaining body temperature directly impacts recovery quality and anesthetic safety, especially in cats and small breed dogs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What You'll Learn in This Episode π― How to prevent hypothermia during long veterinary dental procedures π― Why warm IV fluids improve anesthetic recovery π― How full-body warming systems support patient temperature stability π― When full mouth extractions may need to be staged π― Which anesthetic parameters guide intraoperative decision-making π― Why lighter anesthesia planes are preferred during oral surgery π― How dental nerve blocks reduce inhalant anesthetic requirements π― Whether veterinary dental patients should be fed before discharge π― Why post-operative pain medication remains essential after extractions π― How veterinary technicians can assist with dental charting and pathology recognition π― Why anxious patients may benefit from modified intake and recovery protocols π― Why even routine prophylaxis patients often require pain management planning
Key Veterinary Dentistry Takeaways π Maintaining body temperature is critical for safe anesthesia and smoother recovery in veterinary dental patients π Warm IV fluids and dual-sided warming systems can significantly reduce intraoperative hypothermia π Most full mouth extraction patients can safely complete procedures without staging when properly monitored π Patient temperature, blood pressure, and anesthetic depth should guide procedural decisions in real time π Nerve blocks allow clinicians to maintain lighter anesthesia planes during advanced oral surgery π Veterinary technicians play an important role in identifying obvious pathology and initiating dental charting π Dental radiographs help technicians recognize extraction sites, tooth resorption, and missing or unerupted teeth π Reducing patient anxiety improves recovery quality and client satisfaction π Pain management protocols should assume underlying pathology exists until proven otherwise π Routine prophylaxis patients frequently require treatment beyond simple cleaning once diagnostics are completed
Questions This Episode Answers β How can veterinary teams prevent hypothermia during dental procedures? β Why are warm IV fluids helpful during anesthesia? β When should full mouth extractions be staged? β What temperature changes may require aborting a procedure? β Should veterinary dental patients be fed before discharge? β Are post-operative pain medications always necessary after extractions? β Why are lighter anesthesia planes preferred during oral surgery? β How do nerve blocks improve anesthetic safety? β Can veterinary technicians perform dental charting? β What pathology should technicians recognize on dental radiographs? β How can practices reduce anxiety in veterinary dental patients? β Why do even routine prophylaxis patients often require pain management?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ready to take your dentistry skills further? π FREE 1 CE Course: https://ivdi.org/free Sign up for the newsletter for weekly clinical insights
π¦· Live & Online Veterinary Dental Courses https://veterinarydentistry.net/
π οΈ Dr. Brett's Trusted Equipment & Instruments https://drbrettspets.com/
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veterinary dental anesthesia, veterinary dental hypothermia, veterinary dentistry recovery protocols, full mouth extractions dogs, veterinary dental nerve blocks, veterinary dental pain management, veterinary technician dental charting, veterinary dental radiographs, anesthesia monitoring veterinary dentistry, veterinary oral surgery recovery, veterinary dentistry CE course, veterinary dental warming techniques, small dog anesthesia dentistry, feline dental anesthesia, veterinary dentistry Q&A

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