View clinical trials related to Local Anesthetic Complication.
Filter by:The aim of the present study was to evaluate the pain during local anesthetic buccal infiltration for the maxillary canines after adding Sodium Bicarbonate 8.4% during local anesthesia.
Evaluate the effect of the photobiomodulation mode of the diode laser on the anaesthetic area and find the best parameter that would accelerate the withdrawal of anaesthesia.
Post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) is the most frequent complications related to herpes zoster, and can persist for months or even years, and require extensive treatment. For this purpose, pharmacological therapies based on tricyclic antidepressants (amitriptyline), central nervous system depressants (pregabalin) and also opioids, have been stablished. However, all the drugs mentioned can cause serious systemic adverse effects that worsen the patient's quality of life. To avoid these complications, topical therapies based on Capsaicin or Lidocaine 5% patches have been developed. However, these treatments have shown dissimilar results in controlling PHN, so a mixed formulation of lidocaine/tetracaine could show better results. For these reasons, the main objective of our work is to evaluate the plasma levels of lidocaine derived from the application of a topical formulation of lidocaine derived from the application of a topical formulation of lidocaine 23%/tetracaine 7% in patients with neuropathic pain.
The aim of this study is to compare the pain perception of pediatric patients during extraction with and without palatal injection and to show whether articaine HCl and lidocaine HCl can provide palatal anesthesia in maxillary tooth extraction without the need for a second palatal injection. In addition, to evaluate the superiority of articaine HCl and lidocaine HCl to each other in providing local anesthesia and to compare pain control between each other. An observational prospective clinical study is planned to be performed in children aged 8-12 years with maxillary tooth extraction indication. It is planned to include 96 children in the study. Patients will be divided into 6 groups. After the application of anesthesia and after tooth extraction, the pain they feel with visual analogue scale and the level of pain observed with the Wong-Baker faces pain rating scale will be marked.
Safety and efficacy of wide awake local anesthesia no torniquet technique (WALANT) in ankle surgery. Studying risks and benefits from WALANT compared to general anesthesia . WALANT expected to decrease in intraoperative/post operative pain at the surgical site and decrease hospital time .
Dexamethasone will be used as an adjunct to local anesthetics (bupivacaine) to prolong the duration of laparoscopically-placed transversus-abdominis plane blocks in elective colorectal resection.
General anesthesia during pregnancy is associated with several major risks including unanticipated difficult airway, pulmonary aspiration, and specific anesthetic effects on the newborn. Thus, intrathecal anesthesia is the technique of choice for cesarean section. Nevertheless, the main side effect of intrathecal anesthesia is arterial hypotension which depend mainly on the dose of local anesthetic administered intrathecally. To date there is no guidelines nor evidences whic help the anesthetist to precisely estimate the required dose. Most often a "standardized dose" of 8 to 10 mg of bupivacaine is administered. However, some data suggest that a lower dose may be administered resulting in less frequent arterial hypotension. Nevertheless, a well designed randomized study is lacking.
The aim of this study was to describe the postoperative "baseline" magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) appearance of the ipsilateral thigh musculature after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The secondary aim was to describe baseline muscle enzyme levels under the same clinical scenario. Neither of these measures have been reported previously.
This study was conducted to compare the efficacy of the buccal infiltration technique with inferior alveolar nerve block technique for alleviation of intraoperative pain during pulpal treatment of second mandibular primary molars using 4% Articaine 1:100000. The study started with 22 cooperative medically free patients aging 7 to 8 years old seeking treatment for bilateral deep carious mandibular second primary molars with no previous history of irreversible pulpitis, swelling, sinus tract or tooth mobility. Randomization was achieved when each candidate was instructed to pick an opaque and sealed envelope from two separate black and opaque boxes. First box contained two envelopes to identify the side on which the operator will perform the treatment. While the second box contained another two envelopes describing which anesthetic technique will be implemented with the previously chosen side. After clinical and radiographic examination, the patient received the pulpal treatment under the identified side and injecting technique. Videotaping of the pulpal treatment procedure was initiated after numbness was experienced by the child. A blind assessor was assigned to review the videos and fill in the SEM pain scale to identify the pain and level of discomfort experienced by the child during the pulpal treatment.
This is a single-center, randomized, prospective study evaluating the effect of serratus anterior plane block performed after induction of anesthesia, but before the start of surgery on postoperative opioid requirements. The hypothesis of the study is that serratus anterior plane blocks are relatively simple to perform, provide good postoperative analgesia, facilitate early tracheal extubation, and reduce the length of hospital stay after pediatric cardiac surgery through a thoracotomy.