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Suggested resources to help dental teams and other healthcare professionals find information on medicines used in dentistry or which may impact dental treatment

SPS resources

SPS resources provide advice and information on different aspects of medicines use, relevant to dentistry.

Interactions and adverse effects

SPS articles can be used to check for clinically relevant interactions and adverse effects in dentistry. Including:

Prescribing

We provide advice to support prescribing in the following dental scenarios:

Supplying medicines

Use these resources to understand how patients can obtain medicines or devices after dental treatment:

Controlled drugs

This series of pages aims to help dental teams understand how to manage controlled drugs safely and legally:

Pregnancy

SPS guidance outlines key risks and principles to ensure safe, informed decisions when prescribing in pregnancy. These pages are relevant to dental care:

Breastfeeding

The SPS Drugs in Lactation Advisory Service provides advice on medicines use during breastfeeding. Relevant topics for dental teams include:

Other resources

In addition to our own resources, we recommend the following resources. Access is free unless stated otherwise.

Antimicrobial Prescribing in Dentistry – Good Practice Guidelines

Published by the Faculty of General Dental Practice (FGDP) which is now part of the College of General Dentistry. Antimicrobial Prescribing in Dentistry provides practical guidance to dentists for antimicrobial prescribing. . The guidance advises on choice of agent, dose and course duration and applies to all dental settings.The guidance, which advises on choice of agent, dose and course duration, applies to all dental settings.

The guidance can be viewed online (free registration required). A pdf version that can be searched or printed is only available to members of the college.

Scottish Dental Clinical Effectiveness Programme

The Scottish Dental Clinical Effectiveness Programme (SDCEP) offers user-friendly, evidence-based guidance and recommendations and is endorsed for use in England.

SDCEP guidance is written for dental teams but is useful for all healthcare professionals considering the implications of medicines when patients require dental treatment.

Anticoagulants

Management of Dental Patients Taking Anticoagulants or Antiplatelet Drugs provides recommendations for dental treatment of patients taking DOACs, warfarin, antiplatelet drugs and LMWHs.

MRONJ

Guidance on Oral Health Management of Patients at Risk of Medication-related Osteonecrosis of the Jaw includes advice for patients and dispensers.

Endocarditis prophylaxis

Advice for dental teams on the identification and management of patients at risk of infective endocarditis. Antibiotic Prophylaxis Against Infective Endocarditis – March 2026 provides practical advice for dental teams implementing NICE recommendations. Including:

Prescribing guidance

Drug Prescribing for Dentistry provides dentally-relevant prescribing information from the BNF and BNFC, presented in a user-friendly format. It provides advice on:

British National Formulary and BNFC

The British National Formulary (BNF) and BNF for Children (BNFC) contain the Dental Practitioners’ Formulary listing medicines dentists can prescribe on NHS prescriptions (FP10D).

They provide guidance on Prescribing in dental practice, with links to relevant sections of the BNF. Topics include, prescription writing and medical emergencies in dental practice.

There are also relevant treatment summaries.

Clinical Knowledge Summaries (CKS)

Clinical Knowledge Summaries (CKS) provide advice on oral health for primary care practitioners.

Addison’s Disease Self-Help Group

The Addison’s Self-Help Group (ADSHG) publishes advice for dentists on treating individuals with Addison’s disease. It includes advice on ‘steroid cover’ for dental procedures.

British Dental Association

The British Dental Association (BDA) (subscription required) produces various advice sheets related to medicines.

British Dental Journal – DMAS series

A series published in the British Dental Journal (BDJ) in 2020 based on questions to the SPS Dental Medicines Advice Service received over 10 years. They address common issues encountered in dentistry (subscription required):

Delivering better oral health: an evidence-based toolkit for prevention

Delivering better oral health: an evidence-based toolkit for prevention supports dental teams in providing high-quality preventive care. It includes advice for the use of topical fluoride.

Summaries of Product Characteristics

All licensed medicines have a Summary of Product Characteristics (SPC), the document which describes the properties and officially approved conditions of use of a medicine.

All UK SPCs, including those for dental local anaesthetics and branded high-strength fluoride toothpastes, are available via the MHRA products page.

Many, but not all, SPCs are also included in the electronic Medicines Compendium.

Prescribers need to know the licensed status of medicines they prescribe; using medicines outside of their license is considered ‘off-label’.

Reporting adverse effects to the Yellow Card Scheme

The dental team are encouraged to report suspected adverse reactions to medicines, medical devices plus other healthcare products including e-cigarettes, to the Yellow Card Scheme.

Get in touch

If information is not available from the resources listed, or if your case is complex, our Dental Medicines Advice service (SPS page) may be able to help. We provide information and advice to healthcare professionals including dental teams on medicines used in dentistry or which may impact dental treatment.