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The investigators are doing a study to see if a new way of giving local anesthesia during dental surgery can help children feel better after having a tooth removed under general anesthesia (when they are fully asleep). Normally, dentists give numbing medicine that can leave the lips or cheeks numb. This sometimes causes children to bite themselves without realizing it, which can make them upset when they wake up. In this study, the investigators are testing a special technique called intra-osseous anesthesia, which numbs only the tooth and not the surrounding soft tissues. The investigators hope this will reduce pain after surgery without causing numbness or accidental biting. Children in the study will be randomly placed into one of two groups: one group will receive this special anesthesia before the tooth is removed, and the other group will not. Before and after the procedure, the investigators will ask some short questions and observe the participants to check for pain, anxiety, or confusion. The parents of the participants will also receive a short online questionnaire to fill out the day after the procedure. The goal is to find out if this method helps children wake up more comfortably, feel less pain, and avoid side effects. This could improve how dentists care for children during dental treatments in the future.
Full description
To investigate whether the administration of intra-osseous local anesthesia (Quicksleeper 5) to children during general anesthesia prior to the extraction of a first permanent molar has an effect on the immediate and delayed postoperative delirium, anxiety and pain in the child.
Intra-osseous anesthesia consists of 3 major steps:
A permanent molar must be removed from the child and this will be done under general anesthesia. Previous scientific studies have shown that when the dentist also administers local anesthesia during general anesthesia for tooth removal, children suffer from side effects of the local anesthesia. These side effects include numbness and lip or cheek biting. This can make them extra agitated when waking up from general anesthesia.
This intra-osseous anesthesia technique only anesthetizes the tooth. As a result, the child should not experience the above-mentioned side effects or to a lesser extent. In this study,The investigators want to investigate this effect. The advantage of this technique is that the child is expected to need little or no painkillers after the operation compared to the current procedure.
On the day of the procedure, upon arrival at the hospital, three short questionnaires will be administered regarding anxiety and pain. One questionnaire is observational, for the other two he investigators ask a little cooperation from the patient. This concerns the FLACC (Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability), VAS (Visual Analogue Scale) and CFSS-DS (Children's Fear Survey Schedule - Dental Scale).
If the patient is randomly assigned to the group that will receive local anaesthetic, this will be administered intra-osseously with the Quicksleeper 5 just before the tooth(s) is/are removed. The local anaesthetic that will be used is articaine 4% with epinephrine 1/100,000, this is a standard local anaesthetic in dentistry, the good and efficient effect of which has long been demonstrated.
Group 1 will receive local anaesthesia intra-osseously and group 2 will not. There is no further distinction between the groups.
The time at which the local anaesthetic is administered and the time at which the procedure is over will be noted.
After the procedure, the same questionnaires will be administered at set times as before the procedure. The patient does not have to stay in the hospital longer than normal for these questionnaires. The FLACC will be administered after 10/30/60/120 min, the VAS when the patient is able to speak and after 120 min, the CFSS-DS after 120 min and the delirium flowchart is an observational measurement that will be performed 5 min after spontaneously opening the eyes. The day after the procedure, the parents/guardian will be asked to answer one more questionnaire of approximately 20 questions via a QR code received.
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80 participants in 2 patient groups
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Sivaprakash Rajasekharan, BDS,MSc,PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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