Anterior shoulder dislocation is a pathology frequently encountered in emergency medicine. The success in reducing anterior shoulder dislocations depends on muscle relaxation, which is itself conditioned by the patient's pain and apprehension. However, there is no consensus on the optimal technique for reducing anterior shoulder dislocation or the analgesia associated with it. Analgesia with METHOXYFLURANE showed a greater reduction in post-traumatic pain compared to standard analgesic treatment and faster action of METHOXYFLURANE. A retrospective study which has compared analgesia with METHOXYFLURANE and analgesic sedation with PROPOFOL found a shoulder reduction success rate of 80% and a reduction in the average length of stay in the emergency department. Finally, the use of virtual reality in pain management is emerging in our practices by allowing pre- and per-procedure hypno-sedation-analgesia. However, the use of virtual reality headsets has not been studied in the management of anterior shoulder dislocation. The use of these two techniques could therefore limit the use of procedural sedation in the context of shoulder dislocation reduction.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
Use of a " virtual reality " (VR) headset of " Pico G2 " type with " HypnoVR " software and audio headset " Taotronics BH22 " during all the reduction care
Self administered inhalated methoxyflurane (maximal inhaled dose : 3 mL)
An anticipated analgesia protocol composed of PARACETAMOL 1g +/- OXYNORM 5 mg or 10 mg according to patients weight and pain intensity as evaluated by a simple numeric rating scale is administred prior to the reduction procedure. Inhaled equimolar mixture of oxygen and notrous oxyde (MEOPA) at a 15L/min flux is administered concomitantly to the reduction procedure.
Nice University Hospital
Nice, France
RECRUITINGDecrease in the rate of procedural sedation of anterior shoulder dislocation
Rate of use of procedural sedation for anterior shoulder dislocation reduction in the interventional groups compared to the control group
Time frame: Day 1 (day of reduction of anterior shoulder dislocation)
The amount of co-antalgesics administered
Posology of co-analgesic medications administered
Time frame: 3 months
The duration of the procedure
Time lenght of the reduction procedure
Time frame: Day 1 (day of change of anterior shoulder dislocation)
The dosage of drugs used in procedural sedation
Posology of sedative drugs administered for a procedural sedation
Time frame: Day 1 (day of reduction of anterior shoulder dislocation)
The average length of stay in the emergency department
Average length of stay in the emergency department
Time frame: 3 months
Patient satisfaction
Patient satisfaction at the end of care evaluated with a questionnaire EVA
Time frame: 3 months
The rate of reduction-related complications
Complications related to the reduction
Time frame: 3 months
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