The aim of this study is to compare the pain score between the direct method and the conventional method in patients who have undergone copper or hormonal intrauterine devices (IUD) for contraception and to find an answer to the question of which method is better.
The intrauterine device (IUD) is one of the commonly used methods of contraception due to its effectiveness in providing reliable contraception, its ease of application, non-obstruction of sexual life, affordability, minimal absolute contraindications, and reversibility. Despite this increasing preference, concerns regarding the use of both levonorgestrel-releasing and copper IUDs due to the potential pain and fear of pain during insertion, which has hindered the adoption of this method. Although the conventional method is used for intrauterine device insertion, the authors defined the direct method, also known as the torpedo technique, in 2006. IUD practitioners have started to prefer this direct method because it is simpler, faster and has fewer insertion steps than the conventional technique. However, IUD practitioners should apply the most painless and tolerable method to women who choose an IUD for contraception. Therefore, in order to understand which method is less painful, patients will be divided into 2 groups as those who have IUD inserted with the conventional method and those who have IUD inserted with the direct method. At the end of the procedure, participants in both groups will be asked to rate the most severe pain they experienced during the procedure according to the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (from 0 to 10). In the conventional method: the anterior lip of the cervix was grasped and pulled with Pozzi forceps, and after entering the uterine cavity with a hysterometry the IUD was inserted. In the direct method: the anterior lip of the cervix was grasped and pulled with Pozzi forceps, and without using hysterometry the IUD was directly inserted.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
128
All womens will be placed in a gynecological position and underwent a bimanual examination to better determine whether the uterus was in the anteverted or retroverted position. Subsequently, a speculum will be inserted, and the cervix will be disinfected with betadine. In the conventional method: the anterior lip of the cervix is grasped and pulled with Pozzi forceps, and after entering the uterine cavity with a hysterometry the IUD is inserted. In the direct method: the anterior lip of the cervix is grasped and pulled with Pozzi forceps, and without using hysterometry the IUD is directly inserted. The strings will be cut approximately 2-3 cm after the cervix, and the Pozzi forceps and speculum will be removed. The accuracy of the IUD placement will be confirmed using pelvic ultrasound. The process will take about five minutes.
Ankara City Hospital
Ankara, Çankaya, Turkey (Türkiye)
Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
This is a numeric pain score evaluated as "painless" (score=0) and "worst pain" (score=10). Score \<3 mild pain, 3-6 mild-moderate pain, and \>6 moderate-to-severe pain.
Time frame: Thirty minutes
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