Comparing Binaural Beats and 432Hz Music for Reduction of Preoperative Anxiety in Root Canal Patients
- Conditions
- Dental Anxiety
- Interventions
- Behavioral: White noiseBehavioral: Binaural beatsBehavioral: 432 Hz music
- Registration Number
- NCT06349200
- Lead Sponsor
- Dow University of Health Sciences
- Brief Summary
Many patients suffer from dental anxiety and don't go to dentists for regular checkups. This can lead to the initiation and progression of dental caries, which, if not controlled at the right time, can lead to the loss of the tooth itself. Many forms of distraction have been used to overcome this; music is also one of them. The main objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of binaural beats and 432 Hz music in reducing preoperative dental unease and anxiety among adult patients undergoing root canal treatment in a dental teaching hospital. The null hypothesis is that both binaural beats and 432 Hz-frequency music are not effective in reducing preoperative dental anxiety among patients undergoing routine endodontic therapy in a dental teaching hospital. A total of three groups will be a part of this study, with a total sample size of 99 participants (33 participants in each group). Group A will listen to 432 Hz music for 10 minutes before the procedure, Group B will listen to binaural beats for 10 minutes before the procedure; and Group C (active control group) will listen to white noise for 10 minutes before the procedure. The Visual Analog Scale for Anxiety will be used to assess the anxiety levels before local anesthesia administration, after local anesthesia administration, and 10 minutes after listening to sounds. Then root canal treatment will be completed as a routine procedure.
- Detailed Description
i. Background Patients undergoing routine endodontic treatment often encounter severe preoperative and intraoperative anxiety that can increase the perception of pain intensity and decrease patient's cooperation with the dentist. Many audio distraction techniques have been used as a non-pharmacological means of anxiety reduction in dentistry for the past few years, and they have shown great results.
ii. Objective The main objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of binaural beats and 432 Hz music in reducing preoperative dental unease and anxiety among adult patients undergoing routine, nonsurgical endodontic treatment in dental teaching hospital.
iii. Methodology In this randomized controlled clinical trial, a total of 99 adult patients will be recruited and will be randomly divided into three groups based on the anxiety reduction method. The first group (n = 33) will listen to music tuned to 432 Hz using wireless headphones. The second group (n = 33) will listen to binaural beats using wireless headphones, and the third group (n = 33), the control group, will listen to white noise using wireless headphones. All the patients will be informed about the procedure, and anxiety will be measured using the Visual Analogue Scale before the administration of local anesthesia. After the administration of local anesthesia, a second measurement of anxiety level will be recorded. After that, the group A will be asked to listen to 432 Hz audios using wireless headphones, group B will be requested to listen to binaural sounds using wireless headphones, and the group C (active control group) will listen to white noise using wireless headphones. After 10 minutes, anxiety will be measured again using the Visual Analog Scale. The root canal treatment will be completed in the usual way.
vi: Sequence Generation: Participants will be randomized using a lottery method to either one of the interventional groups or the control group. This method will ensure that each participant has an equal chance of being assigned to either group. 99 small pieces of paper will be made; 33 of them will have the letter 'A' written on them, 33 of them will have the letter 'B' written on them, and the remaining 33 will have the letter 'C' written on them, denoting their respective groups. All of these chits will be folded four times and placed in a hat. The participants will be asked to draw one piece of paper from the hat to be assigned to one group.
vii: Blinding: The participants and outcome assessors will be blinded in this research (double blinded). The participants will not know about their group assignment or the intervention they will receive and the outcome assessors will not know about what intervention has been given to the patients.
viii: Allocation Concealment: The lottery draw will be conducted by an independent person not involved in the study to ensure allocation concealment.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 99
- Both male and female patients.
- Patients between the age group of 18-45 years.
- Patients who are appointed for endodontic treatment.
- Maxillary or mandibular teeth with a history of pulp necrosis or no history of preoperative pain.
- Patients who will require emergency dental treatment.
- Patients who will be taking antidepressants or medications for any kind of disease.
- Patients who will have any kind of hearing impairment.
- Patients who will be suffering from any kind of chronic, systemic, endocrine, or mental disease.
- Pregnant or lactating women and pediatric patients.
- Smokers.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Control White noise Group C will be the active control group. The patients will listen to white noise for 10 minutes using wireless headphones. Binaural Beats Binaural beats Group B will listen to binaural beats (220 Hz for the right ear and 210 Hz for the left ear) using wireless headphones for 10 minutes. The frequencies will be generated by the mobile application BrainWaves Binaural Beats, MynioTech Apps, Chanpeco, Santa Catarina, Brazil. 432 Hz Music 432 Hz music Group A will listen to music tuned to 432 Hz (Summer by Stefano Crespan Shantam on Spotify) using wireless headphones for 10 minutes.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in Pre-operative Dental Anxiety score using Visual Analog Scale for Anxiety 10 minutes after the sound intervention The visual analog scale for anxiety is a 100-mm horizontal line portrayed on paper, with the left side of the line depicting "no anxiety" and the right side of the line depicting "worst anxiety imaginable," with written instructions of marking a point on the line matching the anxiety level of the patients. The closer the mark will be from the left point of no pain, the more successful the intervention will be.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Dow University of Health Sciences
🇵🇰Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan