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Dental Anxiety clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Dental Anxiety.

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NCT ID: NCT03739346 Not yet recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Hypnosis in Anxiety/Pain Reduction in Children During Pulpotomies

Start date: November 20, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Anxiety and pain are emotions that the child often experiences in the dental office, generating the appearance of negative, uncooperative and even disruptive behaviors during the treatment; these make it difficult for dental care and the possibility of establishing a relationship of trust between the pediatric dentist and the patient. The pediatric dentist must promote a positive attitude of the child throughout the dental treatment, keep the child calm and avoid feeling pain is essential at each appointment. When carrying out dental treatments that are more invasive or painful for the patient, such as pulpotomies, it is difficult to distinguish and separate anxiety from pain. In this project, anxiety/pain will be managed as a whole, to assess it with the same scale, and to correlate the scores obtained with the variations in skin conductance and heart rate, before, during and after perform pulpotomies in children.

NCT ID: NCT03033628 Not yet recruiting - Dental Anxiety Clinical Trials

Pain Perception of Dental Local Anesthesia Using "DentalVibe Comfort System" in a Group of Egyptian Children

Start date: April 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to compare pain during maxillary infiltration local anesthesia injection with the aid of DentalVibe comfort system in comparison to maxillary infiltration injection alone in pediatric dental patients.

NCT ID: NCT00355693 Not yet recruiting - Surgery Clinical Trials

Effect Site Controlled, Reaction Time Safeguarded, Patient Maintained Sedation With Propofol in Anxious Patients

Start date: October 2006
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Whether patient-maintained sedation (the patient controls his/her degree of sedation using a hand-held device) using the drug propofol is safer and more effective when using deteriorating reaction time as an added safeguard against the potential for over sedation in a groups of patients undergoing oral surgery, general dentistry and colonoscopy.