The goal of this clinical trial is to assess if a mix of nitrous oxide and oxygen can improve pain control during bladder Botox injections. The primary question it aims to answer is: Does using nitrous oxide lower the overall level of pain during the procedure? Researchers will compare a 50:50 nitrous oxide/oxygen mixture (administered with the Pro-Nox system) plus standard care (with lidocaine in the bladder) to sham mask plus standard care to see if nitrous oxide works better for lowering pain. Participants will: * Receive their bladder Botox injection in the office setting * Either use nitrous oxide/oxygen plus standard care during the procedure, or sham mask plus standard care * Answer brief questions about pain, anxiety, satisfaction, and willingness to repeat the procedure
This study will assess if a 50:50 nitrous oxide and oxygen mixture can lower pain in women undergoing in-office bladder onabotulinumtoxinA (Botox) injections. Many people report pain during this procedure, and pain is a common reason not to repeat the procedure. Nitrous oxide is a fast-acting inhaled analgesic that is used commonly in the office setting. This randomized controlled trial will compare nitrous oxide/oxygen plus standard care with sham mask plus standard care. Participants assigned to the nitrous oxide group will receive nitrous oxide via the Pro-Nox device during the procedure. Both, participants assigned to the nitrous oxide group and the standard care alone group, will receive the usual lidocaine instilled in the bladder for at least 15 minutes. The study will measure participants overall pain during the procedure. It will also assess peak pain, overall anxiety, satisfaction, willingness to repeat, interest in using nitrous oxide in future bladder Botox procedures, and side effects. Nitrous oxide is expected to wear off within minutes, allowing participants to leave the clinic without restrictions. This research study would be first randomized-controlled trial to evaluate nitrous oxide for pain management during this common in-office procedure.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
96
The Pro-Nox system delivers a fixed 50:50 mixture of nitrous oxide and oxygen for patient self-administered inhaled analgesia. Participants will self-administer nitrous oxide throughout the in-office bladder Botox procedure.
Standard care includes intravesical instilled 1-2% lidocaine with a dwell time of at least 15 minutes before the procedure.
The Sham Mask will involve that participant using the same mask as that of the Nitrous Oxide group, but connected to a Pro-Nox system that is turned completely off. They will therefore receive room air through the mask.
Cincinnati Urogynecology Associates
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Trihealth (Good Samaritan Hospital, Bethesda North Hospital)
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Overall Pain (10-point NRS)
Patient self-reported overall pain during the procedure on an 11-point numeric rating scale.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
Peak Pain (10-point NRS)
Patient self-reported peak pain during the procedure on an 11-point numeric rating scale.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
Peak Pain Timing
Patient self-reported timing of peak pain during the procedure, as it corresponds to different steps during the procedure.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
Overall Anxiety (10-point NRS)
Patient self-reported overall anxiety during the procedure on an 11-point numeric rating scale.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
Satisfaction with Pain Management (10-point NRS)
Patient self-reported satisfaction with pain management during the procedure on an 11-point numeric rating scale.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
Willingness to Repeat (5-point Likert)
Patient self-reported willingness to repeat under similar pain and anxiety management conditions, on a 5-point Likert scale.
Time frame: At least 3 minutes after completion of the procedure.
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