Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Music as an Auxiliary Analgesic and Anxiolytic During First Trimester Abortion
Most first trimester abortions are performed under local anesthesia using either manual or electric vacuum suction aspiration. The majority of women undergoing these procedures experience some amount of pain and anxiety. The investigators seek to understand if the provision of music during first trimester abortion will reduce pain and anxiety associated with this procedure. This study will involve the use of music during first trimester abortion as an additional method of pain and anxiety control. The investigators will recruit women seeking a first trimester suction aspiration procedure primarily for elective pregnancy termination or for other related indications such as an abnormal pregnancy, inevitable abortion, or retained products of conception. Participation will be voluntary and include informed consent. Recruited women will be divided into two groups: control group (no music) and intervention (music) group. All subjects will receive routine care and standard pain control measures, including local anesthesia, during their procedure. Those assigned to the intervention group will receive a portable digital music player (iPOD™ Nano) with headphones to listen to during their procedure. All subjects will complete preoperative and postoperative pain and anxiety questionnaires in addition to a patient satisfaction survey at the end of their visit. The provider will also assess and record the subject's pain experienced during the procedure. The investigators will also measure preoperative and postoperative vital signs on all participants. Subjects will be compensated for their time and study participation will not affect any care received at the clinic. Upon completion of their visit, there will be no additional followup for this study.
Nearly 90% of abortions occur during the first trimester and a majority of these are
performed by suction curettage in an outpatient setting using local anesthesia (Grimes,
2007; Lichtenberg, 2001). When only local anesthesia is used, 97% of women experience pain,
and anxiety level is a positive predictor of pain during abortion (Bélanger, 1989). Although
general anesthesia offers better agents for anxiety and pain management, this route is less
commonly used because of prohibitive costs and potential complications (Grimes, 2007).
Because many first trimester abortion providers utilize local anesthesia as primary pain
management during the procedure, multiple agents and techniques have been investigated to
supplement or enhance the effects of the local anesthetic. Investigated methods include time
delay between paracervical block administration and cervical dilation, intrauterine
lidocaine infusion, and various combinations of inhaled, oral, and intravenous analgesics
and anxiolytics. Additionally, complementary and alternative regimens such as relaxation,
distraction, hypnosis, and aromatherapy have also been evaluated as auxiliary analgesics and
anxiolytics during first trimester abortion. Despite these attempts to improve the anxiety
and pain associated with abortion under local anesthesia, the results and efficacy of these
methods is variable and inconsistent.
Music therapy is classified as a cognitive-behavioral intervention that helps patients by
providing them with a greater sense of self-control in assessing and managing pain (AHCPR,
1992). In 1992, recommendations by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality included
music as one type of cognitive-behavioral intervention for pain management (AHCPR, 1992).
The exact mechanism as to how music impacts pain sensory systems has not been fully
elucidated, but it is thought to engage specific brain functions involved in memory,
learning, and multiple motivational and emotional states (Nilsson, 2008). As the most
influential theory on the nature of pain, the Gate Control Theory hypothesizes that
cognitive-behavioral interventions work by closing the gate of nerve fibers that transmit
ascending sensory information to the brain while concurrently modulating input from
inhibitory systems and psychological factors, the sum of which leads to a reduction in the
pain experience (Tse, 2005; Sendelbach, 2006). The Gate Control Theory posits that music
acts as a distracter, diverting attention away from a noxious stimulus by redirecting a
person's attention or by involving the individual in a distracting task (Tse, 2005).
The role of music as an auxiliary analgesic and anxiolytic has been evaluated in such
outpatient procedures as colonoscopy, laceration repair, dental work, lithotripsy, nasal
surgery, breast biopsy, and colposcopy (Chan, 2003). In addition to other nonpharmacologic
approaches to pain management such as relaxation, distraction, and guided imagery, musical
interventions have demonstrated favorable effects upon pain, anxiety, wound healing, and
recovery among patients in the peri-operative setting (Laurion, 2003). Physiological
parameters such as heart rate, blood pressure, and stress hormone levels improve under the
influence of music (Leardi, 2007). A Cochrane Collaboration review on the use of music for
pain relief found that music reduced pain intensity levels but recommended that music not be
used for primary pain control (Cepeda, 2006). The authors also concluded that the impact of
music on anxiety has not yet been determined and needs to be further investigated. Given
music's demonstrated benefits as an auxiliary analgesic and anxiolytic in multiple operative
settings, its role in the abortion setting deserves further examination. The objective of
this study is to evaluate the role of music as an alternative agent for pain and anxiety
management during first trimester abortion.
A systematic review of 42 randomized controlled trials evaluated the effects of music in
multiple peri-operative settings and found that the intervention had positive effects in
reducing patient pain and anxiety in approximately half of the reviewed studies (Nilsson,
2008). Many included trials were noted to be of "insufficient quality" and a meta-analysis
could not be performed due to variation in the types of music used, the duration of
listening time, and procedures investigated. Furthermore, some studies used non-validated
questionnaires and had other methodological limitations. Nonetheless, the author concluded
that peri-operative musical interventions are easy to implement and effective in reducing
patient pain, anxiety, and stress (Nilsson, 2008).
A 2006 Cochrane Collaboration review examined the effect of music on acute and chronic pain
in 51 randomized controlled trials. They calculated the mean difference in pain intensity
levels, percentage of patients with at least 50% pain relief, and opioid requirements among
3663 subjects. The authors concluded that listening to music reduced pain intensity levels
and opioid requirements but that the magnitude of these benefits is small with uncertain
clinical significance (Cepeda, 2006). Although the pooled results indicated statistical
significance in the reduction of post-operative pain intensity levels, the authors stated
that the role of music in pain relief warrants further investigation as does its role as a
potential anxiolytic. As musical interventions have not been shown to have adverse effects,
it is worth pursuing this nonpharmacologic agent as a supplemental resource for patients
undergoing medical procedures such as first trimester abortion.
Only one study, published in 1975, has examined music as an auxiliary analgesic during first
trimester abortion. This was a randomized controlled trial of 144 patients divided into 3
groups who all received oral diazepam and a paracervical block with mepivacaine in addition
to 1) no further anesthesia, 2) self-administered methoxyflurane, or 3) music via
stereophonic headphones. Patients who listened to music during suction curettage reported
less tension and less pain (Shapiro, 1975). Although this study showed a beneficial effect
of music, its findings are limited by poor study descriptors of patient characteristics, an
unspecified randomization procedure, and lack of appropriate statistical analysis. A
non-validated pain questionnaire was utilized and there is minimal description of procedural
methods, the intervention, and results. Given these limitations, its results may not be
applicable by current randomized trial guidelines. Nonetheless, this is the only published
study to examine the use music as an auxiliary analgesic during first trimester abortion.
Because pain perception is also thought to be highly associated with comorbid conditions
such as depression, anxiety, and substance abuse, the pain experience may influence overall
satisfaction outcomes related to a specific event (Guzeldemir, 2008; Bair, 2007). The
baseline presence of any of these conditions may impact one's response to pain management,
anxiety status, and satisfaction associated with a procedure. In addition to overall
satisfaction, we will assess for these comorbid conditions in our study.
Today, music has become very portable in the form of digital music players such as the
iPOD™. With 25% of Americans and 51% of American adolescents owning one of these devices,
music is a familiar part of many lives (Pew, 2006). Pain studies evaluating musical
interventions as auxiliary analgesia have used various types of music via different delivery
systems (i.e. cassette/CD player with headphones, loudspeakers, live music by a music
therapist) in different settings. Many of these trials have utilized self-selection of music
and have included a variety of musical genres, specific sounds, white noise, and vocal
suggestions. Although some studies indicate that slow and non-lyrical music of the patient's
choice for at least 30 minutes at 60 decibel volume is ideal for optimal pain relief and
relaxation, it is not known if these factors directly influence music's impact in reducing
pain and anxiety (Nilsson, 2008).
Additionally, there is mixed evidence on the role of patient choice in music selection and
whether this affects the amount of pain or anxiety experienced. While some studies have
advocated the use of self-selected music to enhance pain and anxiety reduction (Hekmat,
1993; Lee, 2004), the previously mentioned Cochrane review found that the decline in pain
intensity was similar among patients whether or not the music was self-selected (Cepeda,
2006).
Given the data on music's potential ability to positively influence surgical experiences, we
believe that music as an auxiliary method of anxiety and pain management in first trimester
abortion warrants further investigation. The proposed study will evaluate music's impact on
anxiety and pain experienced during first trimester abortion performed with local anesthesia
and how this might influence overall satisfaction experienced with the procedure. Given that
50% of women who had abortions in 2005 were less than 25 years old (Gamble, 2008) and that
this younger age group likely has increased familiarity with portable digital music players,
this patient population may benefit from music as an auxiliary analgesic and anxiolytic
during pregnancy termination. This research has the potential to expand the arsenal of
low-cost, safe, and effective analgesics and anxiolytics available for surgical abortion, a
commonly performed procedure across the United States and worldwide. The addition of music
to first trimester abortion under local anesthesia provides an opportunity to improve the
pain and anxiety associated with this procedure, especially given that many women of
reproductive age utilize personal digital music players and may welcome this auxiliary
analgesic and anxiolytic to their experience.
The proposed study will be a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the hypothesis that
intraoperative music reduces patient anxiety and pain during first trimester abortion. We
will examine the role of music as an auxiliary analgesic and anxiolytic in conjunction with
a standard pain control regimen used in first trimester suction aspiration procedures
consisting of preoperative oral ibuprofen and local anesthesia using a 1% lidocaine
paracervical block. Participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to the control and
intervention groups.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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