Percutaneous Pin Removal in Children - is Analgesia Necessary?
Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2011-12-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
This is a simple randomised clinical trial to study if non-narcotic analgesia reduces the
pain score and pulse rate of children who undergo removal of percutaneous pins in the
outpatient clinic.
Inclusion criteria:
- 5-12 years of age
- 2 or 3 percutaneous pins in either elbow
Exclusion criteria:
- documented or suspected allergies to acetaminophen, ibuprofen
Patients enrolled in the study are instructed not take additional analgesia prior to the
clinic visit (risk of overdosage explained). This is verified by clinic nurses conducting the
trial.
At the clinic visit, they are randomized into one of three groups
1. acetaminophen; 2. ibuprofen; or 3. Vitamin C (Placebo).
They are served the 'medication' (weight-appropriate dose) and the pins are removed in the
clinic an hour later.
Pain score (Wong-Baker scale) and pulse rate are measured before pin removal, immediately
following pin removal, and 10 minutes after pin removal.
The study hypothesis is that non-narcotic analgesia (such as acetaminophen and ibuprofen) do
not decrease pain score and pulse rate associated with the pin removal procedure.