Treatment Plan 3 Special Needs
Treatment Plan 3 Special Needs
Treatment Plan 3 Special Needs
Assessment
a) Patient interview: The patients chief complaint is “I have a broken tooth and my
b) Medical/dental history: The patient is a 67 year old male. BP: 135/88, hear rate:
are: Lisinopril, Glipizide, Levodopa and Lexapro. Due to his Parkinsons disease
he has tremors in his hands, stiffness in his joints and an impaired balance. He has
early signs of dementia but is still able to function. In the past he’s been told he is
a mouth breather. Last HbA1c reading was a 7.5%. The patient has not seen a
dentist in over 10 years. He says he brushes with a hard bristle toothbrush and
does not floss. He states that he buys his toothpaste on sale so he is not sure if it
contains any fluoride or not. Occasionally he rinses his mouth with hydrogen
peroxide or salt water. Extraoral examination findings were all within normal
Redness and inflammatory infiltrate present in the region of tooth #12. Attached
gingiva in the maxillary anterior appears pink and stippled but the marginal
c) Social history: The patient lost his wife to cancer several years ago and his grown
son lives 1,000 miles away with his family. He still interacts with veteran buddies
who look out for him. He was forced to retire from his factory job 5 years ago due
limits. Intra orally; reported tenderness in the maxillary left quadrant. Redness
and inflammation was present in the region of tooth #12. Although attached
gingiva in the maxillary anterior region appears pink and stippled, the marginal
mouth with areas of lighter bleeding generalized lingually. 4-7mm probing depths
gingival recession.
c) Relate oral changes based on special needs: Due to patients Parkinsons disease,
early stage of dementia and type two diabetes, his oral health will not be as
tremors in his extremities making it very difficult for him to brush and floss his
teeth. He also has early stages of dementia which can cause him to often forget to
take care of or how to take care of his oral health. Type two diabetes makes it
very hard for his mouth to heal from the infections he has going on from not being
II. DH Diagnosis
this patient into this calcification due to the CAL being greater than 5mm in most
areas and because he currently has 19 teeth in his mouth with lots of horizontal
bone loss. We can’t say what his level of bone was 5 years ago, but his bone loss
is at a rapid rate due to his HbA1c being over 7%. Not being able to properly care
for his oral health due to Parkinsons and dementia has led to this diagnosis and
due to type two diabetes it has made it very difficult for his mouth to heal leading
III. Plan
b) Treatment goals: Get the patient on a 3 month recall with dentist office for
cleaning appointments. Come up with a great at home care plan with techniques
IV. Implementation
disease and treatment plan restorations needed. He will then return to our office
for any restorations needed and cleaning. I recommend multiple shorter
appointments for this patient due to his Parkinsons disease he will not be able to
comfortably sit through long appointments. Next visit will be right side SRP with
anesthetic, working slowly and taking multiple breaks for the patient. The patient
will then return to the office to finish the left side SRP with anesthetic.
extensive at home care routine with the patient. Showing him how he can modify
his at home care so he is able to take proper care of his oral health. I would
recommend patient gets a handle grip for his toothbrush. It will make gripping the
handle with his tremors much easier and have better dexterity for brushing. I
would recommend the same for flossing too. Using floss picks or getting long
handle flossers that can be changed out. He had stated that he has a very dry
Biotine rinse for this patient and stress the importance of drinking lots of water.
Because of the very dry mouth, I would also recommend he has fluoride
multiple breaks throughout all appointments due to the Parkinsons disease that
way he can be as comfortable as possible. Also making sure to talk clearly and
slowly due to patient having early stages of dementia that way he can clearly
V. Evaluation
a) How will you or how did you evaluate care: Reevaluate BOP and CAL for any
b) Follow up charting: Perio chart FM to reevaluate probing depths, BOP, CAL and
biofilm
d) Patient OH behavior changes: Make sure he is maintaining good at home care and
make any changes to OHI as needed if he is unable to use the griper for the
toothbrush or the floss picks. After probing reevaluate if there has been any
VI. Citations:
a) Boyd, L.D., Mallonee, L.F., & Wyche, C.J. (2021). Wilkins’ clinical practice of