Sedation Dentistry for Children
Calm, safe treatment options for anxious children and complex care needs — explained openly so you can choose what's right for your child.
Sedation is a tool. It is never a shortcut and it is never used to bypass a child's comfort. At First Smile, sedation conversations always start with: what does this child actually need, and what is the least sedation that achieves a calm, high-quality visit? Sometimes that's nothing. Sometimes it's nitrous oxide. For longer treatments or more anxiety, oral sedation can help. For complex needs, hospital-based general anesthesia may be the right answer. You decide, with full information.
Options we offer
Nitrous Oxide (Laughing Gas)
- Best for
- Mild anxiety, longer visits, gag reflex
- How it works
- Inhaled through a small nose mask. Your child stays awake and aware, just more relaxed.
- Recovery
- Wears off within minutes. Normal activities and food are fine right after the visit.
Oral Conscious Sedation
- Best for
- Higher anxiety, multiple treatments needed, longer procedures
- How it works
- A liquid medication taken by mouth before the appointment. Your child gets drowsy and calm; we monitor vitals throughout.
- Recovery
- A few hours of grogginess after the visit. Parents drive home and stay with the child for the rest of the day.
Hospital-Based General Anesthesia
- Best for
- Extensive treatment, very young children with significant decay, complex special needs
- How it works
- {{REVIEW: describe the OR partner hospital, anesthesia team, and First Smile's role in coordinating the day}}
- Recovery
- {{REVIEW: typical recovery time and post-op support}}
Common questions about sedation
Is sedation safe for my child?
Pediatric dental sedation has a strong safety record when delivered by appropriately trained providers following AAPD guidelines, with continuous monitoring and pre-visit medical screening. We walk through every safety question with you before the visit and never sedate without informed consent.
Will my child remember the visit?
With nitrous oxide, yes — most children remember the visit but recall feeling calm. With oral conscious sedation, many children have little or no memory of the procedure itself, which is often helpful for kids with dental anxiety.
Do you need a special license for sedation?
{{REVIEW: state Dr. Morrow's sedation training and Delaware-specific permitting (e.g., minimal/moderate sedation permit)}}
Will my child eat or drink before the visit?
{{REVIEW: state the practice's fasting protocol for each sedation level}}
Have questions about sedation for your child?
Call us before you book. We'll walk through your child's history and what option fits best.