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The aim of this pilot study is to examine the patient's induced stress and the young dentist's induced stress, during endodontic treatment. This study is carried out using physiologic (cortisol measurement, arterial pressure and heart rate) and psychological data (VAS visual analog scale of stress, pain and discomfort, CORAH and HAD Scales) collected from patients of Brest University Dental Hospital at various stages of root canal treatment. The endodontic treatment is carried out under the usual standards and practices.
Full description
Thirty patients and students are involved. All adult patients referred to the dental department for initial endodontic treatment are given the option of taking part, excluding those presenting cardiovascular disease or mental, psychiatric, or neuronal disease. Patients taking antihypertensive treatment, anxiolytics, sedatives, or neuroleptic drugs are also excluded from the study. Thirty dental students will conduct endodontic treatments according to the regular local procedures. No patient receives any sedative premedication.
The indicators of stress are monitored at 6 steps of endodontic treatment:
T1: preoperative rest; T2: local anaesthesia (4% articaïne hydrochloride with 1:200 000 epinephrine). T3: rubber-dam set-up T4: root canal instrumentation T5: root canal filling T6: postoperative rest
The main study criteria is the variation of stress:
At the 6 steps of the treatment and at the next visit for the final restoration, both subjects (patient and student) are asked to use a visual analog scale (VAS) to score the level of stress specifically induced by the endodontic treatment. The VAS is a 10-cm scale without graduation on which subjects are asked to score the specific level of stress experienced from 0 (not stressed at all) to 10 (worst stress imaginable). The VAS of stress has proven to be a valid tool that is highly sensitive to change.
Other study criteria:
At the beginning of the treatment (T1), patients and students are asked to complete the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD Scale) which is presented as a reliable instrument for assessing clinically significant anxiety and depression in patients.
Salivary samples are collected during each of the 6 steps of endodontic treatment which are then stored at -20° before being sent to the laboratory to test cortisol levels .
When the treatment is complete the students are asked to report:
The main aim of the study is to examine the patient's induced stress during endodontic treatment in order to offer customised solutions to lessen stress. The other aims are to evaluate the young dentist's induced stress, to examine and compare the patient's induced stress and the young dentist's induced stress, and to evaluate the patient's pain and discomfort during endodontic treatment.
The results of this observational study are to be used as a reference for future interventional studies to reduce stress during endodontic treatment. Techniques such as relaxation, hypnosis, acupuncture, distraction, music therapy, positive reinforcement, stop-signalling, and exposure-based treatments, "tell-show-do" are some solutions which could be initiated at the dentistry department of CHRU Brest.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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