Award-Winning Lifestyle Site for the Stylish & Modern South Florida Parent

Is Sedation Dentistry Okay for Our Kids? Let’s Discuss…

Overheard at the supermarket checkout line: “It was fine, honey. The dentist knocked her out with gas and she didn’t feel a thing. Got salmon for dinner!” I know it’s not exactly okay to eavesdrop, but people with cell phones make it impossible not to.

 

I glanced back at the woman behind me. She had a baby in the cart and a pre-teen daughter passing groceries onto the belt. The dentist knocked her out. Wait, is it okay to knock a kid out for dental treatment? It’s obviously something that’s done, routinely, but does that mean it’s okay? After all, the list of things people routinely do that turn out to be not-okay is loooong. I’ve only been knocked out once by my dentist for wisdom tooth extraction. My child has never. But “Cell Phone Mom’s” remarks stuck with me.

 

Was this something my own child would face? I was about to learn all about sedation dentistry…

sedation dentistry Junior Smiles Boca Raton
Stock Photos from Indie Design/Shutterstock

Ask the pediatric dentist

As always, when burdened by concerns involving dentistry, I reached out to my go-to pediatric dentist. Dr. Popper of Boca’s Junior Smiles chuckled when I asked him, point blank, if he planned to knock my little girl out someday.

 

“Whoa!”, he protested. “We don’t knock kids out! Where’s this coming from?” I reluctantly revealed my source. “Cell Phone Mom” at Publix.

 

Dr. Popper smiled and rolled his eyes. “Ah-ha, not Dr. Google for once.” I pointed out that the Junior Smiles website mentions laughing gas. I meant to hold his feet to the fire. What, I wanted to know, was the need for anesthesia when the kid’s mouth was typically already numbed?

 

Dr. Popper nodded. “Perfectly reasonable question”, he agreed. He then brought me up to speed quickly and clearly. “First of all”, he observed, “what we do at Junior Smiles with nitrous oxide gas is not, repeat not, anesthesia. It’s sedation. Laughing gas, in fact, isn’t a very effective pain killer. What it does, the way we use it, is deeply relax the child. Everything seems like a wonderful, magical dream, as one of the kids told me. A lot of them, to be sure, don’t even seem to remember the experience.”

sedation dentistry Junior Smiles
Stock Photos from Yuri Bathan (yuri10b)/Shutterstock

Sedation dentistry for kids?

Anesthesia is what “knocks out” a patient. Sedation is not anesthesia. Dr. Popper went on to explain that after getting sedation going with a blended stream of laughing gas and oxygen, he then injects the gum-numbing medication as usual. Sedation, he once again reminded me, isn’t an effective painkiller.

 

“Sedation dentistry isn’t really about pain”, he continued. “It’s about anxiety”. In reality, the local numbing agents that dentists use today make most procedures painless. Some kids, though, just can’t get comfortable in the dentist’s chair. It takes longer, of course, to complete a procedure properly with a squirmy child. Not only that, it bodes ill for the future. An unpleasant experience at the dentist teaches a kid, well, that dentist visits are horror shows.

 

But what about the risks? That’s certainly what was uppermost in my mind. Sedation. Sounds all druggy!

sedation dentistry Junior Smiles
Stock Photos from st-fotograf/Shutterstock

Sedation dentistry for kids!

The truth set me free. Nitrous oxide is not toxic. It’s flushed out by the body very quickly. The only risks it poses are from displacing oxygen in the breathing mixture, and accidents when trying to be active during use. Neither of these applies to sedation dentistry for kids.

 

Firstly, the child is in the chair. Secondly, the oxygen-nitrous oxide blend is carefully monitored. In any case, the child’s mouth is (obviously!) open, so plenty of air is available. When the procedure’s complete, the dentist runs 100% oxygen for a few minutes. This flushes out the laughing gas from the child’s body. Pediatric dentists go through intensive training in gas administration after dental school. The safety record for nitrous oxide sedation dentistry is essentially perfect.

 

So there you have it. My child doesn’t appear to be a candidate for sedation dentistry at this point. She‘s totally at home with her pediatric dentist, Dr. Popper. However, it’s great to know that sedation dentistry for kids is very much okay in the event that it might help a procedure go a little easier.

 

Can the parents get some too? 😉


 
Phone: 561-210-7788
 
9970 N Central Park Blvd Suite 305,
Boca Raton, FL 33428

Sponsored: This blog post was sponsored by Junior Smiles. All opinions expressed in this blog post are my own and not influenced in any way by the sponsor. Any statistic, quote or other representation about a product or service should be verified with provider and please refer to this site’s Disclosure for more information. I have been compensated, but that does not impact my views or opinions.

Leave a Reply

Michelle Olson-Rogers, Modern Boca Mom Headshot

Michelle Olson-Rogers is the founder of Modern Boca Mom, a leading lifestyle site for the stylish & modern South Florida mommy. ModernBocaMom.com features local businesses, events, lifestyle and family travel options and was the proud winner of the 2019 Florida Blog Con Sunshine Award in the “Favorite Events/Neighborhood Blogger” category. Michelle is also a regular contributor to Boca Raton magazine.


In addition to blogging, Michelle also serves as the Director of Communications and Community Outreach for Grandview Preparatory School, a private PK3-Grade 12 independent school in east Boca Raton. Her successful “Modern Boca Mommy & Me” program has been running there year-round since 2014.

MODERN BOCA MOM PARTNERS

Recent Posts

Sign up for our Newsletter

Join the MBMom Community today by signing up for our Weekly Email Updates!

The latest on Instagram

Follow us @modernbocamom