This study will test the effectiveness of addition of Sodium Bicarbonate as a buffering agent to the anaesthetic solution on minimizing the pain of injection and increasing the onset time and potency of the anaesthetic solution in children
27 healthy cooperative children will be enrolled in the study after taking their guardians' informed consent. The study design will be a split mouth design where each patient will be received buffered anaesthetic solution (8.4% sodium bicarbonate will be added to the anaesthetic solution in ratio 1:19) in one side and conventional anaesthetic solution (4% articaine HCL with 1:1000000 epinephrine) in the other side. The pain during injection for each patient in both sides will be then compared using objective and subjective methods. The onset time of the anaesthesia in both sides will also be compared for each patient using Transcutaneous electric nerve stimulator device (TENS) The results will be collected and mentioned.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
27
Buffered local anesthesia will be administered after being previously prepared just before the injection time. Buffering Local Anesthetic Solutions Using 8.4% Sodium Bicarbonate in a 19:1 Ratio: Using the "REMOVE AND REPLACE hand buffering method" -Under sterile conditions, 0.09 mL of local anesthetic solution will be removed from the cartridge using a 0.5 mL syringe with a 28- gauge, 0.5-inch needle (Kendall Monoject Insulin Syringe \[Tyco Healthcare, tyco.com\] lot number 027501). Using a separate unused syringe, 0.09 mL of the commercially available 8.4% sodium bicarbonate will be removed from the 50 mL vial and immediately injected into the local anesthetic cartridge. The cartridge will be inverted 5 times to mix the solution, and no precipitation will be present.
The control group will receive the unbuffered conventional anaesthetic solution
Kholoud Mamdouh Ahmed Nour
Alexandria, Egypt
Pain during inferior alveolar nerve block injection
Sound, Eye, Motor (SEM) Scale (Appendix II), will be used as an objective method for pain assessment. It comprises the following parameters: (1) Sound, (2) Eye, (3) Motor. For each child, the sounds, eye symptoms and body movements will be evaluated by the operator using the recorded video tapes. The slightest manifestations of the sound, eyes, or motion of the patient is graded in four levels: comfort, mild, moderate, and severe discomfort, and subsequently given grades 1 (comfort), 2 (mild discomfort), 3 (moderate discomfort), and 4 (severe discomfort), respectively. SEM score will be calculated by summing the three grades of the parameters
Time frame: during local anesthesia administration
the onset time of the Anaesthesia
Current Perception Threshold (CPT) detection using Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulator (TENS) device. CPT baseline value is the lowest intensity at which the patient first report feeling the stimulus. It determines the Sensory Threshold (ST), which corresponds to the lowest current intensity capable of eliciting perception. The electrode will be placed on the proposed measuring site and the device will be turned on. The device will start the delivery of current at the lowest output intensity and then slowly increased until the patient reported feeling the stimulus. Patients will be instructed to state if they feel any sensation, at that time the delivery of electrical current will be terminated and CPT intensity will be recorded. Every 30 seconds after administration of anaesthesia, while set at the baseline CPT intensity recording for each patient, the electrode will be applied to the proposed measuring site on the anesthetized side, to detect the time of onset of anaesthesia.
Time frame: after local anesthesia administration
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.