A large number of dentoalveolar (tooth extraction) procedures performed by Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons utilize intravenous sedation. Procedures commonly performed may include surgical removal of teeth, bone grafting, surgical placement of dental implants, and removal of cysts or tumors from the jaws, among others. Obtaining peripheral intravevenous (IV) cannulation often proves to be a very stressful and anxious event for the patient. The anxiety and stress from the venipuncture alone affects not only the psychological stability of the patient, but also the patient's physiology. The Buzzy vibration external stimulation device has shown to be an effective tool in pediatric venipunture procedures. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of the Buzzy stimulation device in pain and anxiety reduction during peripheral intravenous cannulation in an adult population. Enrollees in this study will be patients who will undergo dental surgery with intravenous sedation. The patients who are enrolled will receive an IV either with or without the Buzzy. The Buzzy is a small vibration device which will be placed next to the IV placement site.
The participants will be randomized into two groups, those who use the Buzzy system (experimental), and routine IV start (control). Prior to knowing their group, all patients will answer the "Before Intravenous Catheterization" portion of the form in order to eliminate bias. After this portion is complete, their group (experimental vs control) will be determined from opening a blinded envelope. A tourniquet will be placed, followed by the Buzzy stimulation device (if in the experimental group). An alcohol swab will be used and then a 22 gauge IV catheter will be inserted, connected to fluids, and secured with tape. The antecubital fossa or the dorsal hand/wrist will be the only sites used in the study. All participants will fill out the post-insertion questions on the form and those patients that used the Buzzy system will then fill out the several specific questions related to the experimental group. This will conclude the patient's involvement in the study. The patient will then continue with treatment as planned. We will plan to exclude cases where the IV is not obtained on the first attempt, if a smaller or larger gauge IV catheter is required, or if an insertion site not listed above is required. The case will be excluded if adjunctive steps are taken to obtain IV access (i.e. Oral sedation, nitrous oxide, heat packs).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100
The Buzzy is a reusable device that applies vibration to the skin surface to override the body's gate control pain pathway. It has been used effectively to reduce the discomfort of intravenous cannulation (IV placement) in pediatric patients. Also, it has been utilized to reduce the discomfort of injections in pediatric and adult patients. We are preforming this study to evaluate the effectiveness of the Buzzy in reducing the discomfort associated with intravenous cannluation (IV placement) in adults.
No use of the Buzzy (standard IV access techniques)
University of Iowa College of Dentistry
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Change in Pain
Pain is measured on a 10 point visual analog scale with 0 being no pain and 10 being the worst pain imaginable. A higher score is a worse outcome.
Time frame: Baseline and after IV access
Change in Anxiety
Anxiety is measured on a 10 point visual analog scale with 0 being no anxiety and 10 being the worst anxiety imaginable. A higher score is a worse outcome.
Time frame: Baseline and after IV access
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