Incidence, diagnosis, and management of orofacial pain among new patients receiving tertiary care in Thailand: A 6‐year retrospective study comparing before and during the COVID‐19 outbreak

Author:

Uma Uthai1ORCID,Sae‐tia Klafan2ORCID,Riewruja Yanisa2ORCID,Duphong Panuwat2ORCID,Srisathaporn Asamapon2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Occlusion, Faculty of Dentistry Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

2. Faculty of Dentistry Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere is insufficient data on orofacial pain related to the COVID‐19 outbreak in Thailand.ObjectiveTo investigate the incidence, diagnosis and management of orofacial pain among new patients over the last 6 years, before and during the COVID‐19 outbreak.MethodsMedical records from new patients who first visited Chulalongkorn Dental Hospital between 2017 and 2022 were retrospectively investigated. The sample size was determined, and proportional stratified random sampling was employed to distribute the sample number proportionally across each year. The hospital number of each patient was randomised using online software as a sampling strategy. A data collection form was developed and used to gather information from the digital data system.ResultsAt the first visit, 770 out of 1359 patients (56.7/100 people, 95% CI: 54.0–59.3) reported orofacial pain defined as acute, chronic and unclassified pain. The most common chief complaints based on the AAOP classification were odontogenic pain (90.00%) and temporomandibular disorders (6.10%). The top three provisional modified ICD‐10‐TM diagnoses among these patients were pulp diseases (21.95%), impacted teeth (20.65%) and dental caries (9.09%). 81.87% of dental students' provisional diagnoses matched the final diagnoses given by dental specialists. Only 63.38% of orofacial pain patients were completely managed during the COVID‐19 pandemic with common procedures being surgical removal, extraction and root canal therapy.ConclusionHalf of Thai dental patients seeking tertiary care at a university dental hospital reported orofacial pain, which was not impacted by the COVID‐19 pandemic. In contrast, dysfunction‐related problems in the orofacial area significantly increased during the pandemic.

Publisher

Wiley

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