| Literature DB >> 28106160 |
Fanyuan Yu1, Yao Xiao1, Hanghang Liu1, Fanzi Wu1, Feng Lou1, Dian Chen1, Mingru Bai1, Dingming Huang1,2, Chenglin Wang1,2, Ling Ye1,2.
Abstract
A patient's pain during mandibular third molar extraction often creates problems for a dental surgeon and can also cause immense patient discomfort, such as decreased quality of life, serious complications, or even danger to the patients' lives. Effective pain management is therefore of great importance. Conventional block anesthesia method often fails to control such pain completely during an operation. Therefore, two available alternatives, Gow-Gates (G-G) and Vazirani-Akinosi (V-A) methods, have been developed. However, the results of current studies regarding their effectiveness and safety are somewhat ambiguous. The use of G-G and V-A techniques is therefore restricted. This study did a comprehensive review of the relevant research and finally 7 RCTs were included. The results of this meta-analysis indicate that both G-G and V-A techniques have a lower risk of positive aspiration. G-G technique also evidenced a higher success rate than the conventional method. V-A was faster while the G-G technique in contrast had a slower onset time than the conventional technique. In terms of the measurement of analgesic success, however, the V-A method was statistically indistinguishable from conventional techniques. These findings will hopefully endow clinicians with the knowledge required to make appropriate choices for effective anesthesia during lower third molar extraction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28106160 PMCID: PMC5247732 DOI: 10.1038/srep40987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study Id | Patient | Intervention | Outcomes | Study tpye (study design) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | Age(Year) | Gender (F/M) | Technique | I/C | |||
| Allen, L 1896 | 20 | — | — | C:IANB, I:V-A | 20/20 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(split mouth) |
| Diandian Li 2009 | 420 | M = 29.5, Range:18–38 | 163/257 | C:IANB, I:V-A, G-G | 140/140/140 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(parallel) |
| Fei Wang 2002 | 60 | M = 26.0, Range:18–35 | 18/42 | C:IANB, I:G-G | 30/30 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(parallel) |
| Jiacai He 2000 | 40 | M = 29.5, Range:22–38 | 16/24 | C:IANB, I:V-A | 40/40 | success rate, positive aspiration | RCT(split mouth) |
| Jieping Yang 2013 | 32 | M = 25.0, Range:11.8- ± 38.2 | 18/14 | C:IANB, I:G-G | 32/32 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(split mouth) |
| Jizhong Lv 2009 | 120 | M = 29.5, Range:18–38 | 47/73 | C:IANB, I:V-A | 60/60 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(parallel) |
| Martinez, G 2003 | 56 | M = 23.3, Range:14–38 | 34/22 | C:IANB, I:V-A | 28/28 | success rate, onset time, positive aspiration | RCT(parallel) |
—: no information; M: mean; F/M: Female number versus male number; C: control group, I: intervention group; I/C: patients number in intervention group versus the number of control group.
Figure 1Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Figure 2(A) Forest plot of comparison: G-G method was compared with IANB method, outcome: onset time. (B) Forest plot of comparison: V-A method was compared with IANB method, outcome: onset time.
Figure 3(A) Forest plot of comparison: G-G method was compared with IANB method, outcome: success rate. (B) Forest plot of comparison: V-A method was compared with IANB method, outcome: success rate.
Figure 4(A) Forest plot of comparison: G-G method was compared with IANB method, outcome: positive aspiration rate. (B) Forest plot of comparison: V-A method was compared with IANB method, outcome: positive aspiration rate.