Cystometry is essential for diagnosis and treatment plans by identifying the causes of lower urinary tract symptoms and objectively evaluating bladder functions in diseases such as neurogenic bladder, voiding dysfunction, and vesicoureteral reflux. Children may experience pain during this invasive procedure of inserting the urethra catheter. Furthermore, infants aged ≥ 6 months may feel pain from an unfamiliar and unnatural environment as they experience stranger anxiety. This experience can have a negative physical and emotional impact on children, and uncooperative behavioral reactions caused by pain can hinder the procedure. In this regard, parental holding is known as effective non-pharmacological procedural pain management in children. Although the International Children's Continence Society has advised performing cystometry while holding the infant as an effective non-pharmacological pain management method, there is insufficient evidence to support this. So, this study aimed to analyze the effect of parental holding on reducing pain in children during cystometry.
This is an experimental study in a randomized controlled pre-posttest design. During cystometry, participants in the experimental group are placed on the parents' laps and held in the parents' arms. Participants in the control group are laid down on the examination table. The behavioral (FLACC scale) and physiological (oxygen saturation and heart rate) pain responses are measured at three time points (immediately, 3 min, and 10 min after urethral catheter insertion).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
64
After the urethral catheter is inserted, the participant lies on an examination table lined with paper towels and diapers.
Holding is performed as a non-pharmacological intervention to relieve pain in children during cystometry. After the urethral catheter is inserted, the participant's parent sits in the chair, placing a paper towel and diaper on their lap. The researcher lifts the participant by the shoulder and puts them on their parent's lap, and the parent holds the participant in their arms.
College of Nursing and Mo-Im Kim Nursing Research Institute, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea
Seoul, South Korea
Behavioral pain response change measured using the FLACC(Faces, Legs, Activity, Crying, and Consolability) scale between each time point (immediately, 3 min, and 10 min after urethral catheter insertion).
Behavioral pain response refers to facial expression changes, body movements, postures, and crying on pain stimuli. This is measured using the FLACC scale developed to evaluate acute pain in children. According to the FLACC scale, pain is rated using a total of five subcategories (Faces, Legs, Activity, Crying, and Consolability) on a scale of 0-2, and the scores are summed (range 0 to 10).
Time frame: Change from immediately, 3 minutes, and 10 minutes after urethral catheter insertion
Physiological pain responses change measured using oxygen saturation (%/min). Change between each time point (immediately, 3 min, and 10 min after urethral catheter insertion), automatically measured by a Pulse oximeter.
The oxygen saturation (%/minute) is automatically measured by a Nellcor OxiMax N-560 Pulse oximeter (Nellcor Puritan Bennett LLC, USA), and a Nellcor SpO2 sensor (Nellcor Puritan Bennett LLC, USA) is attached to the participants' toes.
Time frame: Change from immediately, 3 minutes, and 10 minutes after urethral catheter insertion
Physiological pain responses change measured using heart rate (beats/min) . Change between each time point (immediately, 3 min, and 10 min after urethral catheter insertion), automatically measured by a Pulse oximeter.
The heart rate (beats/minute) is automatically measured by a Nellcor OxiMax N-560 Pulse oximeter (Nellcor Puritan Bennett LLC, USA), and a Nellcor SpO2 sensor (Nellcor Puritan Bennett LLC, USA) is attached to the participants' toes.
Time frame: Change from immediately, 3 minutes, and 10 minutes after urethral catheter insertion
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