QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS LATEST 2026/2027 | GRADED A+.
which has thicker cortical plate, maxillary or mandibular? - ANSWER- mandibular (this
decreased the amount of the local anesthesia molecules that can penetrate to nerves during
infiltration injections)
what is the TX for a hematoma? - ANSWER- pressure, cold compresses on/off, NSAIDS, and
time.
a positive aspiration when administering a PSA is due to what? - ANSWER- aspirating
hemorrhage caused by injection
what are the three most common locations for hematomas to occur? - ANSWER- 1. PSA
2. IA
3. mental
blanching of the tissue following/during an injection is caused by what? - ANSWER-
vasospasm/vasoconstriction caused by epinephrine or brushing against autonomic nerves
stimulation vasospasm
the pterygomandibular space/triangle is bordered by what anatomical structures? - ANSWER-
ramus, lateral pterygoid muscle, and medial pterygoid muscle
the pterygomandibular space/triangle is identified intra-orally by what? - ANSWER- pterygoid
hamulus (palpation), coronoid notch (palpation), and pterygomandibular raphe (visual)
the mandibular foramen lies approx. __________________________ of the distance from the
anterior border of the ramus to the posterior border - ANSWER- 1/2 to 2/3
Antero-posteriorly, the greater palatine foramen is located between the
___________________________. - ANSWER- middle oft he maxillary second molar and the
middle of the third molar in about 80-90% of patients.
all arteries leading to the oral cavity receive blood from what? - ANSWER- external carotid
(most are direct or indirect branches from the maxillary artery with the exception of the lingula --
this is a direct branch from the external carotid)
veins from the oral cavity will drain into what? - ANSWER- internal jugular (both internal and
external drain into the brachiocephalic veins which drain to the superior vena cava
, do myelinated or un-myelinated nerves create faster impulse? - ANSWER- myelinated (impulses
jump from node to node -- node of ranvier)
what is saltatory conduction? - ANSWER- the process of nerve impulses jumping from nodes of
ranvier along a myelinated nerve
what is the resting potential charges of a nerve? - ANSWER- inside is negative and outside is
positive
due to the thickness of cortical bone, which is a good option for local anesthetic in the
mandibular arch during infiltrations? - ANSWER- Articaine (Septocaine) is sometimes effective
for mand. infiltrations (4% vs. 2% for lidocaine) due to the increased number of molecules
hematomas are most common with which type of injection, and why? - ANSWER- PSA due to
nicking a vessel in the pterygoid plexus of veins
what molecules are predominately outside/inside at resting potential? - ANSWER- Na+ outside
and K+ inside
what is depolarization? - ANSWER- Na+ channels open , Na+ flows in reversing polarity; K+
flows out to restore neutrality; the Na+ and K+ pumps restore polarity (resting potential)
what is the mechanism of action for local anesthetics? - ANSWER- blocks the Na+ channels
preventing depolarization
what is the basic structure of anesthetics? - ANSWER- aromatic ring (lipid soluble), intermediate
chain (amide or ester configuration), and terminal amine (able to ionize and become water
soluble)
lipophilic vs. hydrophyllic - ANSWER- lipophilic is lipid soluble and hydrophyllic is water
soluble
what makes the terminal amine so important to the structure of local anesthetic? - ANSWER-
this allows the local anesthetic to the both lipid soluble and water soluble at the apporpriate times
(ex: hydrophyllic for dilution and pH control; lipophyllic in order to penetrate neuron cell
membrane; hydrophyllic to block Na+ channels)
lipid solubility of local anesthetics - ANSWER- the different structure of the various anesthetics
confers varying degrees of lipid solubility (the greater the lipid solubility of the basic molecule
the more potent it is)