The document discusses local anesthesia techniques for pediatric patients. It notes that the mandibular foramen is lower in children than adults, so the inferior alveolar nerve block injection must be made slightly lower and more posterior. The technique involves opening the patient's mouth wide, placing the thumb on the coronoid notch and fingers on the posterior mandible, then inserting the needle parallel to the bone at the occlusal plane level between ridges and injecting adjacent to the bone. A long buccal nerve block can also be used to anesthetize molar gingiva by injecting in the mucobuccal fold distal to the most posterior molar.