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Can Acetaminophen Pretreatment Decrease the Pain Associated With Closed Nasal Bone Reduction? a Triple-Blind Randomized Clinical Trial Publisher Pubmed



Sohrabpour S1 ; Safaeyan M2 ; Aghazadeh K1 ; Firouzifar M1 ; Mousaviasl B3
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology, Otorhinolaryngology Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  2. 2. Private Practitioner, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tehran Medical Sciences, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3. Resident of Otolaryngology, Otorhinolaryngology Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Source: Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Published:2021


Abstract

Purpose: Nasal bone fracture is a common maxillofacial injury, which is usually managed under local anesthesia because it is fast and effective but painful. We designed this study to see if pre-emptive analgesia with acetaminophen can reduce the pain associated with nasal bone reduction under local anesthesia. Patients and Methods: This was a triple-blind, randomized clinical trial. Our sample was patients with nose fracture (eligible for closed reduction) who presented to our nasal fracture clinic and they were divided into 2 arms. Medication was randomly delivered via packages, and the surgeon, patients, and data analyzer were all blind to the intervention. Demographic data along with the visual analog scale pain scores (1 to 10 score from least to most severe pain) during local anesthesia, during reduction, and 24 hours after reduction were recorded, then analyzed using χ2, nonparametric Mann-Whitney test, and correlation analysis. Results: One hundred participants were divided into 2 arms (placebo or acetaminophen 500-mg tablet 45 minutes before reduction). The patients were mostly men (74%), and the most common mechanism was involvement in a fight (30%). Pain scores, as well as surgeon satisfaction analysis, returned no statistical difference between the 2 groups. Correlation analysis was performed, and the only factor for pain severity during reduction was the number of tries needed. Conclusions: Acetaminophen pretreatment did not add analgesia any more than that of placebo. Its use before reduction of nasal bone fracture is not justified. © 2020 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons