Ethyl chloride vapocoolant sprays provide transient skin anesthesia within seconds of application. The current investigation aim is to compare the effect of ethyl chloride based vapocoolant spray to placebo in reducing pain associated with arterial puncture for gasometry determinations. The investigators will conduce a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial at Emergency Department. We will enroll patients who come to Emergency Department who need an arterial gasometry determination. Patients will be randomized to intervention-group (ethyl chloride vapocoolant sprays will be usad before arterial puncture) or to placebo-group (alcohol spray as placebo will be used before arterial puncture.) and after the puncture they will rate their pain using a 10 points visual analogue scale.
Single-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial in an emergency department of Hospital de Basurto in Bilbao, Spain. Patients for whom arterial blood gas analysis had been ordered will be included. They will be randomly assigned to receive application of the experimental ethyl chloride spray or a placebo aerosol spray of a solution of alcohol in water. The assigned spray will be applied just before arterial puncture. The main outcome variable is pain intensity reported on an 11-point numeric rating scale.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
126
Nurses will administrate ethyl chloride vapocoolant spray on patient's skin a few seconds before arterial puncture (of cubital arteria).
Nurses will use an alcohol-based spray as placebo on patient's skin a few seconds before arterial puncture (of cubital arteria).
Hospital de Basurto
Bilbao, Bizkaia, Spain
Pain Level on the Visual Analog Scale (NRS-11)
patients will measure their pain score on a visual analog scale (NRS-11: Numeric Rate Score, from 0 -no pain- to 10 points -the worst pain ever-) after the puncture
Time frame: scores on a scale immediately after the puncture
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