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The Effect of Auditory and Tactile Stimuli in Traumatic Coma

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Head Trauma
Traumatic Coma
Nursing Caries
Interventions
Other: Tactile stimulus
Other: Auditory stimulus
Registration Number
NCT05195606
Lead Sponsor
Akdeniz University
Brief Summary

This study focused on examining the effects of auditory and tactile stimuli to reduce sensory deprivation on consciousness, oxygen saturation and mean arterial pressure in traumatic coma patients.

Detailed Description

Background: One of the most important problems experienced by patients treated in the intensive care unit due to traumatic coma is sensory deprivation.

Aim: In this study, it was aimed to examine the effects of auditory and tactile stimulus to be used in the prevention of sensory deprivation on consciousness, oxygen saturation and mean arterial pressure.

Study Design: The study was planned as a randomized controlled single-blind experiment with three groups. In the study, the patients in the Control group will be given a routine application, the patients in the Intervention A group will be given auditory stimuli, and the patients in the Intervention B group will be treated with tactile stimulus. Interventions will be administered once a day for seven days, for a total of seven times. The "block randomization method" was chosen as the randomization method. In this study, hospitals were taken as a block. An equal number of patients will be recruited from two hospitals and 15 patients will be distributed to three groups from each hospital using the "simple randomization method". 30 patients in each group and 90 patients in total will be included in the study.

Methods: The researcher applied to the patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit for 24-72 hours for seven days, once a day (seven times in total) between 10:00 and 15:00 (Intervention A: 10 minutes of audio recording will be played with headphones. Intervention B: 10 minutes) (5 minutes for one foot) foot massage will be applied. Glaskow Coma Score, oxygen saturation and Mean Arterial Pressure will be measured before and after each intervention (twice daily).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
90
Inclusion Criteria
  • Being treated in the intensive care unit for at least 24 hours due to traumatic coma,
  • 18 years and older
  • Relatives of those who agreed to participate in the study
  • GCS score between 3-8 (GCS: 3-8 indicates coma)
  • Without hearing impairment
  • Having no authority for auditory stimulus
  • No problem for foot massage (Lower extremity fracture, infection)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Who are under the age of 18
  • Those whose relatives do not agree to participate in the research
  • GKS score above 8

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Tactile stimulus (Intervention B)Tactile stimulusTactile stimulus for patients in this group
Auditory stimulus (Intervention A)Auditory stimulusAuditory stimulus for patients in this group
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)1 week

GCS is a diagnostic tool that provides objective evaluation of the patient's eye-opening, verbal and motor response to stimuli. In the scale, the eye opening score is between 1-4, the verbal response is between 1-5, and the motor response is between 1-6, and the total score is between 3-15. The GCS score of the patient who did not respond to painful stimuli, could not open his eyes spontaneously, and had complete loss of muscular tone was three; The GCS score of the patient who is oriented, spontaneously opens his eyes and fulfills the orders is 15. It should be understood that the patient with a GCS score of less than eight is in a coma.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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