Overview

Pain Prevention During Propofol Infusion in Pediatric: Hypnoanalgesia of the Hand Versus Lidocaine.

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2019-06-19
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
The simplicity of the implementation and the effectiveness of hypno-analgesia (via the magic glove technique) has already been proven in some research work, during the installation of peripheral venous route. An unpublished preliminary study has shown that this method appears to be the most effective in preventing pain during pediatric propofol injection. The purpose is to compare the effectiveness of hypno-analgesia of the hand by the "magic glove technique" to lidocaine used in an extemporaneous mixture in the prevention of pain with injection of propofol during intravenous induction in children aged 7 to 14 years
Phase:
Phase 4
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
University Hospital, Toulouse
Treatments:
Lidocaine
Propofol
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Children from 7 to 14 years old.

- Admitted for programmed or ambulatory surgery under general anesthesia.

- ASA I to II. (ASA1: Normal patient or ASA 2: Patient with moderate systemic
abnormality).

- Parents or legal guardians who have signed informed consent to the inclusion visit.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Children under 7, over 14

- In regulated girls, presence of a pregnancy

- ASA III, IV

- Contraindication to propofol (known hypersensitivity to propofol or to one of its
constituents)

- Contraindications to lidocaine (known hypersensitivity to lidocaine hydrochloride,
amide bonded local anesthetics or to any of the excipients, patients with recurrent
porphyria)

- Contraindications to nitrous oxide

- Patient whose clinical condition requires titration of propofol during induction, for
good hemodynamic tolerance.

- Refusal by the child or the parents of intravenous induction.

- Psychological distress (agitation, mental deficiencies, communication disorders,
deafness problems).

- Analgesic or sedative treatment within 24 hours before induction.

- Locoregional or perimedullary anesthesia before anesthetic induction.