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Bristol BDS Year 3: Oral Surgery · Meedu
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Dentistry
Bristol BDS Year 3: Oral Surgery
Common Complications in Oral Surgery
Indications for Dental Extractions
Introduction to Oral Surgery
Local Anaesthetic for Oral Surgery
Management of Haemorrage in Oral Surgery
Bristol BDS Year 3: Oral Surgery
Year 3 BDS Oral Surgery module rebuilt to the Bristol syllabus. Covers indications for dental extractions, local anaesthesia for oral surgery, common intra- and post-operative complications, and management of haemorrhage.
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What physiological mechanism best explains why patients are advised to avoid exercise for 24 hours following a dental extraction?
Select the correct answer
A.
Physical exertion raises blood pressure and increases blood flow to the surgical site, risking clot dislodgement
1
B.
Exercise causes dehydration, which impairs the inflammatory phase of wound healing
2
C.
Increased respiratory rate during exercise introduces oral bacteria into the extraction socket
3
D.
Muscular contraction diverts blood away from the healing site, causing ischaemic necrosis of the clot
4
E.
Exercise-induced immunosuppression delays the initial fibrin clot formation at the socket
5
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