Dental deaths in Italy as reported by online press articles

Oral Dis. 2020 Jul;26(5):858-864. doi: 10.1111/odi.13158. Epub 2019 Oct 9.

Abstract

Objectives: Mortality on the dental chair is a rare and underreported event. This study aimed to identify all deaths that occurred during dental procedures in Italy.

Methods: We searched PubMed/Medline, Scopus, and Internet archives looking for patients who died before, during, or after a dental procedure in Italy from 1990 to 2019.

Results: All the 36 identified fatal events were reported by national or regional newspapers, and none was reported by scientific databases. Interestingly, no cases regarding patients ≤16 years old were found and there was no variation in the number of reported deaths over the years. Most of the cases (n = 29) occurred in out-of-hospital private dental offices. Tooth extraction represented the most frequent culprit operation (39%), while myocardial infarction (28%) was the leading cause of death, followed by cardiac arrest (25%), allergies (11%), and infections (8%). In four cases, death was preprocedural, in 10 intraprocedural and in 21 postprocedural. In 17 cases, a temporal association between injection of anesthesia/sedation and death was observed.

Conclusion: This is the first report on Italian dental procedure-related deaths. Most of these deaths were only temporally associated with a dental procedure and could not to be attributed to malpractice.

Keywords: anesthesia; death; dental disease; dentistry; mortality; public health.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Dental Care*
  • Humans
  • Italy / epidemiology
  • Mortality* / trends
  • Tooth Extraction*