Efficacy and Safety of Articaine and Lidocaine in Extraction of Wisdom Teeth of Upper and Lower Jaws
- Conditions
- Dental ImpactionWisdom Tooth
- Interventions
- Drug: Different dental anesthetic agents during wisdom tooth surgery (Orabloc®, Octocaine®, and Xylestesin-A®)
- Registration Number
- NCT05804630
- Lead Sponsor
- National Taiwan University Hospital
- Brief Summary
Local anesthesia drugs and anesthesia technique play an imperative role in dental treatment. The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of different dental local anesthetics drugs and brands in clinical use for the extraction of wisdom teeth.
- Detailed Description
Local anesthesia drugs and anesthesia technique play an imperative role in dental treatment. They are widely used in oral and maxillofacial surgery, endodontic treatment, periodontal treatment, prosthetics and operative dentistry. They not only reduce the pain of the patient during the treatment, but also improve the comfort of the treatment. The most commonly used local anesthetics are Lidocaine and Articaine, whose efficacy and safety have been demonstrated in many literatures: fast-acting, effective in pain control, comfortable, relatively rare allergic reaction, few local and systemic adverse effects.
Among the above-mentioned drugs, Articaine is an anesthetic drug that has been developed and become popular in recent years. In the past, literature pointed out that due to the relationship between the drug concentration and structure of Articaine, its ability to penetrate into bone is better than that of Lidocaine. Some studies even believe that local infiltration with Articaine can replace block anesthesia with Lidocaine; which means, on the one hand, it is more comfortable during anesthesia. On the other hand, it can avoid the potential adverse effects of block anesthesia, such as: hematoma formation and systemic adverse effects caused by intravascular injection.
For exodontia surgery, a quite common surgery for general dentists and oral surgeons, the most commonly used anesthesia techniques are local infiltration and block anesthesia. The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of different dental local anesthetics drugs and brands in clinical use for the extraction of impacted wisdom teeth. Three types of local anesthetics that have been widely used and proven safe were included:
1. Xylestesin-A® (1.7mL/cartridge contains 20mg/mL Lidocaine + 1:80,000 epinephrine)
2. Octocaine® (1.8mL/cartridge contains 20mg/mL Lidocaine + 1:100,000 epinephrine)
3. Orabloc® (1.8mL/cartridge contains 40mg/mL Articaine + 1:100,000 epinephrine)
This study will be a randomized split-mouth clinical study, and it will include 60 healthy adult patients aged between 20-60 years old, who are evaluated by a single surgeon to be suitable for extraction or odontectomy of their impacted third molars (upper or lower jaws) under local anesthesia. This study consists of two experiments. The above 60 patients will be randomly assigned to group 1 or 2, using different anesthetic drugs or anesthesia techniques:
1. Group 1: Octocaine® block vs. Xylestesin-A® block
2. Group 2: Orabloc® infiltration vs. Octocaine ® block
During the treatment, we will record the patient's subjective anesthesia onset time, the physician's objective anesthesia onset time, the patient's pain scale during surgery, comfort assessment, adverse reactions, postoperative paresthesia, etc. to evaluate the efficacy and safety of these drugs and anesthesia technique.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 60
- Adults aged between 20-60 years old
- Generally healthy or with well-controlled mild systemic diseases (such as well-controlled hypertension, diabetes, or hyperlipidemia)
- Bilateral wisdom teeth with similar difficulty of surgery(according to Pell and Gregory and Winter's classification), which are indicated for surgical removal under local anesthesia
- Known or suspected allergy to amide-type local anesthetic agents
- With systemic contraindication for tooth extraction, such as poorly-controlled heart diseases or diabetes, and severe liver or kidney diseases. Patients with systolic blood pressure greater than 150 mmHg or less than 90 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure greater than 100 mmHg or less than 60 mmHg are also excluded
- With local contraindication for tooth extraction, such as previous irradiation to the surgical region, acute infection or cellulitis at the surgical region
- Patients during pregnancy or lactation
- Patients taking analgesic or sedatives in 24 hrs
- Intolerant of dental extraction surgery under local anesthesia due to anxiety, dentophobia, or pain
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- CROSSOVER
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Experiment 1, arm 1: Articaine infiltration anesthesia Different dental anesthetic agents during wisdom tooth surgery (Orabloc®, Octocaine®, and Xylestesin-A®) This arm aims to compare efficacy and safety of infiltration anesthesia of Articaine (Orabloc®) to block anesthesia of Lidocaine (Octocaine®). It would be a split-mouth study design. The patient in this arm would be randomly assigned to one anesthetic agent and technique at one side (left or right) of the wisdom tooth surgery first, and the other side (left or right) of wisdom tooth surgery would use the other anesthetic agent and technique accordingly. Experiment 2, arm 1: Lidocaine+1:100000 adrenaline block anesthesia Different dental anesthetic agents during wisdom tooth surgery (Orabloc®, Octocaine®, and Xylestesin-A®) This arm aims to compare efficacy and safety of block anesthesia of Lidocaine containing different concentration of epinephrine (adrenaline), i.e. Octocaine® (Lidocaine+1:100000 adrenaline) vs. Xylestesin-A® (Lidocaine+1:80000 adrenaline). It would be a split-mouth study design. The patients in this arm would be randomly assigned to one anesthetic agent at one side (left or right) of the wisdom tooth surgery first, and the other side (left or right) of wisdom tooth surgery would use the other anesthetic agent accordingly. Experiment 1, arm 2: Lidocaine block anesthesia Different dental anesthetic agents during wisdom tooth surgery (Orabloc®, Octocaine®, and Xylestesin-A®) This arm aims to compare efficacy and safety of infiltration anesthesia of Articaine (Orabloc®) to block anesthesia of Lidocaine (Octocaine®). It would be a split-mouth study design. The patient in this arm would be randomly assigned to one anesthetic agent and technique at one side (left or right) of the wisdom tooth surgery first, and the other side (left or right) of wisdom tooth surgery would use the other anesthetic agent and technique accordingly. Experiment 2, arm 2: Lidocaine+1:80000 adrenaline block anesthesia Different dental anesthetic agents during wisdom tooth surgery (Orabloc®, Octocaine®, and Xylestesin-A®) This arm aims to compare efficacy and safety of block anesthesia of Lidocaine containing different concentration of epinephrine (adrenaline), i.e. Octocaine® (Lidocaine+1:100000 adrenaline) vs. Xylestesin-A® (Lidocaine+1:80000 adrenaline). It would be a split-mouth study design. The patients in this arm would be randomly assigned to one anesthetic agent at one side (left or right) of the wisdom tooth surgery first, and the other side (left or right) of wisdom tooth surgery would use the other anesthetic agent accordingly.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Hemodynamic measures Recorded immediate before local anesthesia, immediate after local anesthesia, 5 minutes after local anesthesia and immediate after surgery Blood pressure (Systolic pressure and diastolic pressure)
Pain and satisfaction of the surgery Recorded immediate after each dental extraction surgery Pain according to VAS (0-10) and satisfaction score (1-5, "1" being the least satisfactory and "5" being the most satisfactory)
O2 saturation (SpO2) Recorded immediate before local anesthesia, immediate after local anesthesia, 5 minutes after local anesthesia and immediate after surgery O2 saturation (SpO2)
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Adverse events of anesthesia Recorded during and interview the patient immediate after each dental extraction surgery Such as headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, tachycardia, dyspnea, or post-operative neurosensory disturbance
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Department of Dentistry National Taiwan University Hospital
🇨🇳Taipei, Taiwan