Performing out patient diagnostic and operative gynecological procedures is becoming more popular having the benefits of reducing risks of general anaesthetia, decreasing healthcare burden and increasing satisfaction for both patient and provider. Virtual reality (VR), a new technology, has been studied as a distraction technique for non-pharmacological method of pain relief. It is a computer-generated representation of an immersive videos viewed through a headset.
Performing out patient diagnostic and operative gynecological procedures is becoming more popular having the benefits of reducing risks of general anaesthetia, decreasing healthcare burden and increasing satisfaction for both patient and provider. Such procedures are usually well tolerated , However it can be associated with acute pain and anxiety. Options of Pain relief include sedation, local anaesthetic , analgesics and distraction techniques, however no consistent good quality evidence exists to support practice. Virtual reality (VR), a new technology, has been studied as a distraction technique for non-pharmacological method of pain relief. It is a computer-generated representation of an immersive videos viewed through a headset. The obstacles of cost, quality and accessibility of (VR) devices have significantly eliminated in recent years and offer promising application in the medical field. Virtual reality for managing pain has been studied in many fields including paediatrics, dentistry, burns treatment, chronic pain, labour, and episiotomy. Although a meta-analysis suggested that VR may have a role in reducing pain scores in acutely painful interventions , studies found it to be effective only in needles and burns physical therapy. The studies of VR on pain and anxiety, however, were limited by clinical and statistical heterogeneity. Nonpharmacological options of pain relief have not explored enough the role of VR in reducing pain and improving patient experience in outpatient hysteroscopy .To our knowledge, there is only one publication studying the role of virtual reality in the management of acute pain during office gynaecological procedures
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
To evaluate the role of virtual reality technology as distraction technique in the management of acute pain during outpatient hysteroscopy
Ain Shams University Hospitals
Cairo, Egypt
RECRUITINGAssessment of Pain
The pain level of the cases is evaluated by means of the digital pain as the 11-point visual analog scale (VAS) whereas 0-Represents no pain, 10 - Worst imaginable pain), as well as the 11-point VAS-A (0-Represents no anxiety, 10 - Highest anxiety)
Time frame: 10 minutes from starting the procedure
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Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50