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Abstract
The volume of blood lost by 125 patients during full-mouth extractions and alveoloplasty
under general anesthesia was measured.
The patients were placed into five groups of twenty-five patients each. One group
was used as a control and did not receive a special hemostatic agent; another received
2 per cent lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine; the other three groups received Koagamin,
Kutapressin, and Premarin, respectively. The latter three hemostatic agents were given
preoperatively according to the manufacturers' instructions.
The vasoconstrictive effect of the epinephrine in the local anesthetic greatly decreased
the average blood loss, whereas the other hemostatic agents had no effect. The control
patients bled an average of 282 ml.; the lidocaine and epinephrine group, 189 ml.;
the Koagamin group, 315 ml.; the Kutapressin group, 296 ml.; and the Premarin group,
276 ml.
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References
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Article info
Footnotes
☆Abridgment of thesis submitted by Dr. Curtis to the faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Minnesota in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Dentistry and Oral Surgery.
Identification
Copyright
© 1966 Published by Elsevier Inc.