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Oral Surgeon

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math

A simple toothache can be painful. Imagine undergoing reconstructive jaw surgery! Fortunately, oral surgeons are trained in medical procedures and can give local and general anesthetics to their patients. Once a surgery is complete, patients also need further pain management.

You're an oral surgeon visiting a patient who has had to undergo a rather difficult wisdom tooth extraction. The surgery went well, but you are prescribing painkillers to keep the patient comfortable over the next few days while her mouth heals.

"A small amount of math is used on the job," says Benjamin Davis. He is an oral and maxillofacial surgeon. "It's used for drug volumes and dosages, but it doesn't require high-powered math."

The painkiller you're administering is called Nopain. The idea is to give the patient enough of the pills to keep her comfortable, but no more than she needs. It's also important that she doesn't take more than the daily recommended dose. The maximum amount of Nopain that the patient should consume in a 24-hour period is 300 mg.

You want the patient, Christine, to take 30 mg of Nopain every 4 hours.

  1. If each of Christine's pills contains 15 mg of the drug Nopain, how many pills should she take over a 24-hour period?
  2. Christine misunderstood your directions and didn't read the pill bottle. She took 4 of the 15 mg pills every 4 hours for 1 day. In the 24-hour period, did she exceed the maximum dosage of Nopain?