The purpose of this study is to compare patient responses during and after surgery when local anesthetic is used for dental treatment under general anesthesia (GA) and when it is not used.
Local anesthesia is a widely used tool to ensure patient safety and comfort in the dental office. This is usually accomplished by administering a shot of numbing medicine (local anesthesia) in different parts of the mouth. Local anesthesia is an important tool used for care in the dental office however despite its standardized use in dental clinics use of local anesthetic is not standardized for use in dental cases under GA. In the literature there is some evidence suggesting that it has some marginal benefit for pain control short term post operatively and control of vital signs during surgery. Some evidence also suggests that due to its use there can be increase in post-operative lip chewing and cheek biting due to the numb sensation. Additionally, it has been seen that due to the numb sensation that children can be more irritable during when waking up after surgery. The study section will have 60 participants of which one half will receive local anesthesia for restorative dental care under GA and the other half will receive conventional no anesthesia for restorative dental treatment under GA, based on random assignment (like the flip of a coin). There is an equal chance of being assigned to either group prior to the consented treatment. Before the surgery, a nurse will access the child's overall pain and comfort. The study team (faculty, anesthesiologist, and resident) will record the blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing duration throughout the procedure. After the child has completed the surgery a nurse will again access the child's overall pain and comfort. Lastly, parents will be contacted that evening of surgery by a member of the study team to check up on the child and will be asked some questions to access the child's comfort at home.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
59
2% Lidocaine with 1:100,000 epi
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, Virginia, United States
Post Operative Pain
The Parent's Postoperative Pain Measure ( abbreviated: PPPM) Scale consists of 15 questions with scores ranging from 0 to 15, with one point assigned to each question answered with a "Yes" and therefore higher scores indicating worse postoperative pain. A score of 6 or greater is considered clinically significant pain which was tallied for the primary outcome measure (i..e number of participants experiencing clinically significant postoperative pain).
Time frame: in the evening of the day of surgery, up to 10 hours
Number of Teeth Treated
Will report the mean and standard deviation of number of teeth treated
Time frame: start of procedure to end of procedure, the intraoperative time frme
Procedure Time
Will report the mean and standard deviation of the procedure time
Time frame: start of procedure to end of procedure, minutes
PACU Time
Will report the mean and standard deviation of time after the procedure to through time in the post-anesthesia care unit
Time frame: time from after procedure to through time in the post-anesthesia care unit in minutes
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