Evaluating Growth in Dry Socket Publications: A Bibliometric Analysis
Manju Philip, Ikram UI Haq, Bandar AlMutairi, Saad Bin Shabib, Muhannad A Alshehri, Ibrahim Almuhanna

TL;DR
This paper analyzes global research trends on dry socket from 1905 to 2024, identifying key journals, authors, and topics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive bibliometric analysis of dry socket research, highlighting recent trends and influential contributors.
Findings
Most dry socket research is clinical with level 2 evidence, and over 80% of publications occurred from 2001 to 2024.
The United States leads in research output and citation impact, with the Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery being the top journal.
Majid Eshghpour is the most productive author, and 'dry socket' is the most influential keyword.
Abstract
Dry socket, a common postextraction complication, occurs when the blood clot in the tooth socket fails to form or is dislodged, leading to severe pain and delayed healing. This study aimed to analyze the publication trends and key features of dry socket research published from 1905 to 2024 worldwide. A quantitative bibliometric approach was employed to extract data from the Web of Science database. The search strategy included Topics = (“dry socket” OR “alveolar osteitis”) and covered publications up to December 31, 2024. The search captured all types of documents to provide a comprehensive overview. The study analyzed and extracted several bibliometric parameters, including the classification of clinical versus nonclinical studies, level of evidence, trends in research, and citations over time, as well as information on the leading journals, countries, institutions, authors, and top…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInformation Retrieval and Search Behavior
