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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether immersive game experience (IGE) can improve preoperative anxiety, compliance, and parental satisfaction in children aged 4-12 years undergoing supernumerary tooth extraction under general anesthesia. The main questions are:
Does IGE reduce anxiety measured by SCARED scores, heart rate, salivary cortisol, and LF/HF ratio?
Does IGE improve children's compliance and parental satisfaction?
Participants are randomized 1:1 to standard care or standard care plus IGE, which includes role-playing, parent-child interactive games, environmental adjustments, and rewards. Written informed consent is obtained from legal guardians, and all procedures follow ethical guidelines approved by Jiaxing First Hospital Ethics Committee (2025-LP-044). Outcomes are assessed by blinded staff using validated scales and physiological measures.
Full description
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether immersive game experience (IGE) can improve preoperative emotional management, compliance, and parental satisfaction in children undergoing supernumerary tooth extraction. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Does immersive game experience reduce preoperative anxiety as measured by SCARED scores, heart rate, salivary cortisol, and LF/HF ratio?
Does immersive game experience improve children's compliance (Frankl compliance score) and parental satisfaction?
If there is a comparison group: Researchers will compare the control group receiving standard care (including environmental temperature control, preoperative psychological counseling, and parent-guided distraction) with the intervention group receiving standard care plus immersive game experience, to see if the intervention improves anxiety management, compliance, and satisfaction.
Participants will:
Be children aged 4-12 years undergoing supernumerary tooth extraction under general anesthesia, diagnosed by panoramic X-ray and/or CBCT;
Meet inclusion criteria: ASA physical status I or II, no sensory impairments, no diagnosed psychiatric or neurodevelopmental disorders, legal guardians able to provide informed consent, and children able to understand basic instructions;
Be excluded if they require emergency surgery, have significant developmental delays or cognitive impairment, history of severe sedation/anesthesia adverse events, active systemic infection or fever (>38°C) at admission, legal guardians with cognitive impairment or unable to complete questionnaires, or children refuse participation after initial explanation;
Be randomized 1:1 into control (n=52) or intervention group (n=50) using a computer-generated random number table with allocation concealment by opaque sealed envelopes; randomization performed by an independent researcher.
Interventions:
Control group: Standard care including environmental adjustments, psychological preparation, and parental guidance for distraction.
Intervention group: Standard care plus immersive game experience (IGE) including role-playing scenarios (e.g., using dolls to simulate IV puncture), parent-child interactive games (role reversal exercises), environmental adjustments (children's music, colorful objects), and rewards (cartoon stickers) after intervention.
Protection of human subjects:
Written informed consent obtained from legal guardians; child patient data kept confidential; gender-sensitive procedures conducted with guardian or same-gender staff present; independent in-hospital complaint channel established; staff trained regularly in minors' rights and emergency handling.
Statistical analysis:
IBM SPSS 22.0 and R 4.3.1 were used. Sample size calculation based on pretest SCARED score differences (power 90%, α=0.05, two-sided) yielded 102 participants considering 10% dropout. Continuous variables expressed as mean ± SD; categorical variables as frequency (percentage). Baseline comparisons by independent t-test or chi-square test. Primary outcomes (heart rate, SCARED scores, cortisol, LF/HF ratio) analyzed using repeated-measures ANOVA; secondary outcomes (Frankl compliance, satisfaction) analyzed using Mann-Whitney U, t-test, or chi-square test. Correlations by Pearson coefficient; multiple comparisons adjusted by Benjamini-Hochberg FDR. Moderator effects analyzed with group × SCARED interaction, adjusting for age and baseline anxiety. Significance defined as P<0.05.
Other specifications:
Approved by Jiaxing First Hospital Ethics Committee (2025-LP-044) and follows CONSORT guidelines.
All game props disinfected after use; physiological data collected after 5-min rest; saliva stored at -80°C and analyzed by high-sensitivity ELISA; compliance assessed by blinded surgeons. The study is monitored by the ethics committee, and major protocol changes require re-approval.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
YiHong Shao, Head and Neck Surgeon
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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