A complete bank of 500 original single-best-answer questions written to current UK guidance.
Around 200 link to a primary source you can verify; the remainder rest on widely accepted UK teaching.
Study mode gives feedback and the basis after each question; exam mode is timed, scores at the end, and lets you review every question, answer and source.
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UK guidance crib sheet
The points overseas-trained dentists most often get caught on in Paper B — the current UK position where it commonly differs from practice elsewhere. Items marked ⚠ verify change from time to time; confirm against the linked source close to your exam.
This is a study aid written to UK guidance, not official exam material.
1 · Regulation & professionalism
The GDC regulates individual registrants; the CQC regulates the practice/premises (in England). You must work within your scope of practice and hold indemnity.
The GDC's nine Standards put patients' interests first: consent, confidentiality, clear communication, working with colleagues, raising concerns.
Duty of candour: be open and honest when something goes wrong, and apologise — this is a professional and statutory duty.
Raise concerns if patients may be at risk; keep clear, contemporaneous records.
Keep patient information confidential; share only with consent or a lawful basis (Data Protection Act 2018 / UK GDPR).
Retain records for at least 11 years for adults, and for children until age 25 (whichever is longer). ⚠ verify
Records must be accurate and contemporaneous; amend by adding a dated note, never by obscuring the original.
4 · Medical emergencies (Resuscitation Council UK)
Anaphylaxis: adrenaline 500 micrograms IM (0.5 mL of 1:1000), repeat after 5 min if needed; call 999.
Hypoglycaemia: conscious → oral glucose/sugary drink; unconscious → glucagon 1 mg IM (or IV glucose); call 999.
Asthma: salbutamol via a spacer, repeated. Angina: GTN spray and rest. Seizure: protect from injury, don't restrain, time it; buccal midazolam if prolonged (>5 min).
Practices must keep the recommended emergency drugs and equipment and train the team regularly (BLS).
Infective endocarditis prophylaxis is NOT routine (NICE CG64). For those at increased risk it may be considered on a shared-decision basis — a common difference from overseas practice. ⚠ verify
Most acute dental infection is treated by drainage/extraction/pulp removal, not antibiotics. Antibiotics only for spreading or systemic infection, or the immunocompromised.
First line: amoxicillin (or phenoxymethylpenicillin); add metronidazole for anaerobes. Penicillin allergy → metronidazole or clarithromycin — not clindamycin as routine first choice.
Codeine is contraindicated under 12 and when breastfeeding (MHRA). Follow antimicrobial stewardship — shortest effective course.
Do not routinely stop anticoagulants or antiplatelets for dental procedures — bleeding is usually controlled with local measures, and stopping risks clot/stroke.
Warfarin: check INR (ideally within 24–72 h); treat if INR below 4.0 with local haemostasis.
DOACs (apixaban, rivaroxaban, dabigatran, edoxaban): for higher-bleeding-risk procedures, consider missing or delaying the morning dose per SDCEP; use local measures. ⚠ verify
Antiplatelets (aspirin, clopidogrel, dual therapy): continue; local measures.
MRONJ risk (bisphosphonates, denosumab, antiangiogenics): don't stop the drug for routine extractions; use atraumatic technique and review; refer high-risk cases.
Two regulations: IRR 2017 protects staff and the public; IR(ME)R 2017 protects the patient.
IR(ME)R roles: referrer, practitioner (justifies the exposure) and operator (carries it out).
Every exposure must be justified and optimised (ALARP). No routine radiographs — use selection criteria. Use rectangular collimation and the fastest receptor.
Suspected oral cancer: make an urgent (2-week-wait) referral for an unexplained ulcer, lump, or red/white patch lasting more than 3 weeks (NICE NG12).
Tooth whitening: only by, or under the direct supervision of, a dental professional; patient must be 18+; maximum 6% hydrogen peroxide (over-the-counter products are capped at 0.1%).
Dental amalgam: restricted for children under 15 and pregnant or breastfeeding women unless clinically necessary (mercury regulations); a wider phase-out is evolving. ⚠ verify
Local anaesthetic: maximum safe dose is weight-based — know the limit for the agent used and don't exceed it (e.g. lidocaine with adrenaline). ⚠ verify
Needlestick / sharps injury: encourage bleeding, wash with soap and water, cover, then report and get an occupational-health risk assessment.
Referrals: include the reason, relevant history and findings, and the urgency; keep the patient informed and get consent to share information.
General revision aids collected from study material — broad medicine, not UK-specific guidance. Each set has been checked against standard references; anything that couldn't be verified is flagged, and gaps have been filled in.
A revision aid, not official exam material. For anything that guides real UK clinical practice, use the UK guidance crib sheet instead.
Leucoplakia
The most common potentially-malignant disorder of the oral mucosa. A diagnosis of exclusion (WHO).
Definition
A white patch/plaque that cannot be scraped off and cannot be characterised clinically or histologically as any other definable lesion.
± Dysplasia (mild → moderate → severe → carcinoma in situ) = malignant potential
Malignant potential
~3–17% transform to SCC ⚠ range varies
Higher risk: non-homogeneous, floor of mouth / ventral tongue, long duration, dysplasia
Diagnosis & management
Confirm by incisional biopsy
Remove risk factors; review every 3–6 months
Excise if moderate/severe dysplasia
Differential diagnosis
Frictional keratosis, lichen planus, chronic candidiasis, leukoedema, white sponge naevus
Exam pearls
Cannot be wiped off (vs candidiasis)
Diagnosis of exclusion; SCC is the malignant change
Oral submucous fibrosis (OSMF)
A chronic, progressive scarring disease of the oral mucosa; a potentially-malignant disorder (Pindborg).
Definition
Chronic disease with juxta-epithelial inflammation and fibroelastic change of the lamina propria + epithelial atrophy → stiffness, trismus and inability to eat.
Diuretics and many antihypertensives → xerostomia (caries/candidiasis risk)
Orthostatic hypotension — raise the chair slowly (alpha-blockers, nitrates)
Other quick hits
Beta-blockers can mask hypoglycaemia; cause bradycardia
Statins → myalgia; NSAIDs interact with antihypertensives/anticoagulants — prescribe with care
Triads — emergencies & medically compromised
The dentally-relevant triads: chairside emergencies and conditions that affect dental care. (The general-medicine triads have been set aside — see the note at the end.)
Cardiac arrest
Unresponsiveness
Apnoea / no normal breathing
Absent pulse
Acute asthma
Wheeze
Dyspnoea
Cough
Whipple's triad Hypoglycaemia
Symptoms of hypoglycaemia
Low measured plasma glucose
Symptoms relieved when glucose is corrected
Cushing's triad Raised intracranial pressure
Hypertension (widening pulse pressure)
Bradycardia
Irregular respiration
Samter's triad Aspirin sensitivity
Asthma
Nasal polyps
Aspirin / NSAID sensitivity
Relevant when choosing analgesics.
Virchow's triad Thrombosis risk
Venous stasis
Hypercoagulability
Endothelial injury
Background for anticoagulated patients.
Triads — head, neck & orofacial
Clusters a dentist may meet in orofacial pain and head/neck assessment.
Horner's syndrome
Ptosis
Miosis
Anhidrosis (± enophthalmos)
Migraine with aura
Aura
Unilateral throbbing headache
Nausea / vomiting
Gradenigo syndrome Petrous apicitis
Abducens (VI) nerve palsy
Deep facial / retro-orbital pain
Otorrhoea
Ménière's disease
Episodic vertigo
Sensorineural hearing loss
Tinnitus
Triads — oral signs of systemic disease
Systemic conditions with tell-tale oral or dental features.
Hutchinson's triad Late congenital syphilis
Hutchinson (notched) incisors
Interstitial keratitis
Sensorineural (8th nerve) deafness
A classic dental sign — the teeth are part of the triad.
Reversible unconsciousness with analgesia, amnesia, immobility and muscle relaxation. In UK dentistry GA is hospital-only — chairside you use conscious sedation.