Office hysteroscopy is a cornerstone in the diagnostic evaluation of infertile women, enabling direct visualization of the uterine cavity for identifying intrauterine pathology. The vaginoscopic ("no-touch") approach, which eliminates the use of a speculum and tenaculum, is increasingly adopted due to improved tolerability, higher success rates, and reduced pain compared to conventional methods.
Office hysteroscopy is a cornerstone in the diagnostic evaluation of infertile women, enabling direct visualization of the uterine cavity for identifying intrauterine pathology. The vaginoscopic ("no-touch") approach, which eliminates the use of a speculum and tenaculum, is increasingly adopted due to improved tolerability, higher success rates, and reduced pain compared to conventional methods. Despite this, many women still report moderate to severe pain, particularly during cervical passage and uterine distension. High pain scores may result in incomplete examinations, decreased patient satisfaction, and increased need for sedation or analgesia. Various pharmacological interventions have been studied, including NSAIDs, local anesthetics, and misoprostol, with inconsistent or limited benefit. Verbal analgesia, a structured communication strategy involving calm, supportive, and reassuring verbal cues, has been shown to reduce procedural pain in other gynecologic settings such as IUD insertion. However, no randomized trial has specifically evaluated structured verbal analgesia in women with primary infertility undergoing vaginoscopic office hysteroscopy. This trial aims to address this evidence gap by comparing verbal analgesia with standard neutral communication, with both groups receiving baseline NSAID premedication.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
92
Providers will deliver a standardized verbal analgesia script in a calm, slow-paced, supportive tone, synchronized to procedural steps: * Scope introduction (introitus → external os): "You may feel light pressure as the camera enters-keep a slow, steady breath; you are doing well." * Cervical passage (internal os): "A brief pinch or cramp may happen now; it will pass quickly-breathe in slowly, and out." * Uterine entry and distension: "A feeling of fullness is expected; stay with your breath-it eases in moments." * Cavity inspection: "You may notice short waves of cramp; they are normal and brief-you're managing this well." * Withdrawal: "We are nearly finished-slow exhale as we come out. That's it, you did great." Providers will undergo training to ensure fidelity. All participants will receive ibuprofen 600 mg orally one hour before hysteroscopy as standard analgesia.
Providers will use neutral, procedural statements without supportive phrasing, e.g., "Starting the camera now," "Passing the cervix," "Entering the uterus," "Inspecting the cavity," "Withdrawing the camera.". All participants will receive ibuprofen 600 mg orally one hour before hysteroscopy as standard analgesia.
Al Gezeera Hospital
Giza, Egypt
RECRUITINGpain during OH
It will be measured by 0-10 numerical rating scale where 0 indicates no pain and 10 worst pain imaginable
Time frame: During the procedure (immediately after insertion of hysteroscope, assessed within 5 minutes
Patient satisfaction
Patient satisfaction on a 0-10 NRS (0 = no satisfaction, 10 = maximum satisfaction).
Time frame: At the end of the visit (within 30 minutes of procedure completion)
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