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High-Concentration Nitrous Oxide for Dental Procedural Sedation in Children

Not Applicable
Conditions
Anxiety
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT02886351
Lead Sponsor
Bnai Zion Medical Center
Brief Summary

The use of nitrous oxide as a sedative agent is very common in pediatric dentistry. In concentrations up to 50% it is considered as mild sedation and it is very safe. Despite its safety and widespread of its use nitrous oxide is not a potent drug and many times dentists fail to gain cooperation in moderate or high anxious children, and the alternatives are to use moderate sedation with drugs such as Midazolam, Atarax or general anesthesia. Higher concentration was not conducted in Pediatry densitery. The aim of this study is to compare the effectivity and safety of providing nitrous oxide at increasing concentrations 60%, 70% with 50% parameters, sedation depth, adverse events and cooperation of the child during the dental treatment.Our hypothesis is that nitrous oxide in concentrations higher than 50% up to 70% is a safe and effective sedation method in dental treatment of children.

Detailed Description

Nitrous oxide/oxygen in varying concentrations has been successfully used for many years to provide sedation and analgesia for a variety of painful procedures in children. The use of nitrous oxide as a sedative agent is very common in pediatric dentistry. In concentrations up to 50% it is considered as mild sedation and it is very safe. It is usually used for mild or moderate anxiety state because it is not so potent in concentrations up to 50 %. Despite its safety and widespread of its use nitrous oxide is not a potent drug and many times dentists fail to gain cooperation in moderate or high anxious children, and the alternatives are to use moderate sedation with drugs such as Midazolam, Atarax or general anesthesia. Nitrous oxide 50% is the most common concentration in use but the results of the sedation does not always provide a satisfactory cooperation, higher concentration was not conducted in Pediatry densitery. The aim of this study is to compare the effectivity and safety of providing nitrous oxide at increasing concentrations 60%, 70% with 50% parameters, sedation depth, adverse events and cooperation of the child during the dental treatment.Our hypothesis is that nitrous oxide in concentrations higher than 50% up to 70% is a safe and effective sedation method in dental treatment of children.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children evaluated by a senior pediatric dentist and require a wide treatment of caries, with a high score of anxiety unable to accept dental treatment with nitrous oxide /oxide of 50% in combined with behavioral management in the pediatric dental clinic.

Exclusion criteria:

  • Children with high potential risk of sedation, snoring, stridor, sleep apnea, maxillofacial malformation, history of airway difficulty, gastro esophageal reflux, reactive airway disease or acute runny nose, cardiac disease, altered mental status, inadequate fasting time.
  • Parental refusal for conscious sedation.
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
nitrous oxideNitrous OxideAdministration of high concentration of nitrous oxygen in pediatric dentistry
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Achieving cooperation in Pediatric dentistry numerical scaleless than 60 minutes
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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