Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: Jan 01, 2017

Salivary Alpha Amylase, Dental Anxiety, and Extraction Pain: A Pilot Study

BA and
DDS
Page Range: 22 – 28
DOI: 10.2344/anpr-63-03-02
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The primary intention of this study was to determine whether salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) factors or the Dental Anxiety Scale (DAS) was a better predictor of dental extraction pain. This study followed a cross-sectional design and included a convenience sample (n = 23) recruited from an outpatient oral surgery clinic. While waiting for their scheduled appointments, consenting patients completed both basic demographic/medical history questionnaires and Corah's DAS as well as submitted sublingual saliva samples. After their extractions, patients marked visual analog scales (VAS) to indicate the intensity of their intraoperative discomfort. Results of this study confirm that there is a relationship between a patient's dental anxiety and intraoperative extraction pain (r[21] = .47, P = .02). This study did not find that preoperative sAA factors (concentration and output rate) were related to either VAS extraction pain or DAS score. A strong positive relationship was observed between the concentration of sAA and the rate of sAA output (r[21] = .81, P < .001). Based on the results of our study, we conclude that dental anxiety has a moderate but significant correlation with intraoperative dental pain. Factors of sAA do not appear to be predictive of this experience. Therefore, simply assessing an anxious patient may be the best indication of that patient's extraction pain.

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Copyright: © 2017 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
<bold>Figure 1</bold>
Figure 1

Patient partitioning. Data were excluded from analyses if patients had eaten 1 hour prior to saliva collection, were scheduled for intravenous sedation, had been diagnosed with xerostomia, were taking beta-blockers, or were taking antidepressant and/or antipsychotic medications.


<bold>Figure 2</bold>
Figure 2

Stratification of responses for each component of the Corah Dental Anxiety Scale.


<bold>Figure 3</bold>
Figure 3

(A) Scatter plot of salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) output rate (y axis) against sAA concentration (x axis) summarizing the results. r(21) = .81, P < .001. (B) Scatter plot of visual analog scale score (y axis) against Dental Anxiety Scale score (x axis) summarizing the results. r(21) = .47, P = .02.


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Kevin C. Lee, Columbia University, College of Dental Medicine, 630 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032; kcl2136@cumc.columbia.edu.
Received: Feb 04, 2016
Accepted: Apr 14, 2016