I'm not sure what local anesthetic is the active ingredient in what dentists all seem to call "novocaine."
I had some type of adverse reaction to "novocaine" at my dentist's office yesterday.
Besides tremors and a racing heartbeat, I had a smothering sensation.
But the thing that really scared me was that I suddenly started to see double and could not--in spite of trying very hard--bring my eyes into focus. They felt like they were diverging, as though one was looking to the right and the other was looking to the left.
This occured during a computer-pump infusion of local anesthetic.
I'm normally not anxious during dental procedures. From now on, I will be!! I felt that my dentist handled it badly.
Are cold wet cloths and smelling salts used routinely in a modern dental practice to revive patients?
I heard the dentist mutter "must've gone IV" but later he said, no, that it "diffused into a blood vessel." He also said that it was the epinephrine in the local and not the local itself that did this.
I could understand the local causing me not to be able to control and thus focus the eye on the side receiving the infusion, thus resulting in double vision. I cannot understand epinephrine doing this.
I am an asthmatic and sometimes have to get epi in the ER. I know what it feels like in much larger doses than dentists use and that it doesn't cause my eyes to do this. The racing heart, yes. The jitteriness, hand tremors, yes.
My dentist also told me that in the future, I should warn a physician before receiving a local anesthetic because epinephrine is present in their locals in larger concentrations than in dental locals.
Does anyone here have experience with local anesthetics causing adverse reactions in people? Do you think it was really the epinephrine or it was the whateveracaine that did this?
I know I want to find another dentist, preferrably once who uses nitrous oxide.

