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About
The surgical placement of dental implants is presently a common procedure performed by oral surgeons, periodontists, and general dentists. The surgery can be performed under local anesthesia and involves the incision of soft tissue to expose the underlying bone, preparation of the implant site using a specialized surgical drill, and.screwing the implant into bone using a specialized headpiece. Dental implant patients experience postoperative pain yet there are no studies in the literature which have evaluated the efficacy of analgesics in this patient population. The current pilot study will evaluate the analgesic effects and tolerability of a recently FDA-approved analgesic formulation of intranasal ketorolac (SPRIX®) in 25 patients who have 1 - 3 dental implants surgically placed. Patients will self administer the ketorolac nasal spray (one spray in each nostril, 31.5 mg total dose) when their postoperative pain reaches at least a moderate severity. Pain intensity and pain relief scores will then be recorded every 20 minutes for the first hour, at 1.5 and 2 hours and then hourly through 6 hours on a validated analgesic diary. Side effects will be recorded when and if they occur. Patients will then transition to a multi-dose phase where they will be allowed to dose with ketorolac as indicated in the package insert (up to 4 times per day for 5 days). Patients will record the time of each dose, a daily assessment of overall efficacy and side effects, and the use of any rescue medication (acetaminophen 650 mg) on a take home diary.
Full description
OBJECTIVES
To compare mean post-dose pain intensity scores at each time-point with the baseline pain intensity score during the initial 6-hour evaluation period.
To calculate the area under the 6-hour pain relief time action curve (TOTPAR-6) for intranasal ketorolac.
To calculate the percentage of subjects who reach a level of at least moderate pain by achieving a score of at least 40 mm on a 100 mm visual analog scale within 5 hours after the completion of surgery.
To determine the mean number of days of analgesic dosing in dental implant surgery patients when employing intranasal ketorolac as their pain medication.
To determine the number of patients taking rescue medication (acetaminophen 650 mg) and the mean number of rescue medication doses taken in dental implant surgery patients when employing intranasal ketorolac as their pain medication.
To determine the overall tolerability of intranasal ketorolac in dental implant surgery patients.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Key Inclusion Criteria
Male or female between 18 and 64 years of age.
Must sign informed consent prior to initiation of any study procedures. The subject must be able to understand and agree to cooperate with study requirements.
BMI between 19 and 29 kg/m2.
Must require the surgical placement of 1 - 3 dental implants that are being placed in a one or two stage non-immediately loaded surgical procedure employing 2% lidocaine and/or 4% articaine with epinephrine and/or 3% mepivacaine plain for local anesthesia.
Females of child-bearing potential must have a negative urine pregnancy test at screening and immediately prior to the initiation of dental implant surgery and must have been using adequate means of birth control (abstinence, oral contraceptive steroids, intrauterine device (IUD), etc.) for at least one month prior to study entry and during the study.
In the opinion of the investigators the subject can safely tolerate ketorolac and acetaminophen.
Exclusion criteria
Key Exclusion Criteria
Require the placement of more than 3 implants or require extensive bone grafting in addition to implant placement.
Need to administer anxiolytic/sedation drugs during surgery other than nitrous oxide/oxygen.
Need to administer the long acting local anesthetic bupivacaine with 1:200,000 epinephrine.
Implant(s) that are going to be immediately loaded on the day of surgery
Females that are pregnant or breast feeding
Allergies or hypersensitivity (aspirin sensitive asthma) to ketorolac, aspirin, ibuprofen, other NSAIDs, or acetaminophen.
History of gastrointestinal ulcers and/or bleeding.
On warfarin, dicumarol, clopidogrel or any other anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy other than low dose (81 mg - 325 mg) aspirin.
Clinically significant kidney or liver disease where the intake of NSAIDs or acetaminophen would put the subject at undo risk.
Blood pressure greater than 160/95 at the time of screening or immediately before surgery.
Inflammation of the nasal mucosa or upper respiratory tract infection
Have ingested any analgesic agent within 48 hours of surgery.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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28 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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