| Literature DB >> 35196310 |
Salah D Qanadli1, Louis Gudmundsson1, Giuseppe Gullo1, Alexandre Ponti1, Sarah Saltiel1, Anne-Marie Jouannic1, Mohamed Faouzi2, David C Rotzinger1.
Abstract
Endovascular interventions (EVI) are increasingly performed as minimally-invasive alternatives to surgery and have many advantages, including a decreased need for general anesthesia. However, EVI can be stressful for patients and often lead to anxiety and pain related to the procedure. The use of local anesthetics, anxiolytics, and analgesic drugs can help avoid general anesthesia. Nevertheless, these drugs have potential side effects. Alternative nonpharmacological therapies can improve patients' experience during conscious interventions and reduce the need for additional medications. The added value of virtually augmented self-hypnosis (VA-HYPO) and its potential to reduce pain and anxiety during peripheral and visceral arterial and venous EVI is unknown. This is a prospective two-arm trial designed to randomize 100 patients in two groups according to the use or not of VA-HYPO during peripheral EVI as a complementary nonpharmacological technique to improve patient comfort. The main objective is to compare per-procedural anxiety, and the secondary aim is to compare the rated per-procedural pain in both groups. The potential significance is that VA-HYPO may improve patients' experience during peripheral and visceral arterial and venous EVI and other minimally invasive interventions performed under local anesthesia. Trial registration: Our study is registered on clinicaltrials.gov, with trial registration number: NCT04561596.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35196310 PMCID: PMC8865664 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments.
Anxiety scale used before and after the endovascular intervention.
| Not at all | A little | Somewhat | Very much so | ||
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| I feel calm |
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| I feel secure |
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| I feel tense |
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| I feel strained |
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| I feel at ease |
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| I feel upset |
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| I am worrying about possible misfortunes |
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| I feel satisfied |
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| I feel frightened |
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| I feel comfortable |
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| I feel self-confident |
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| I feel nervous |
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| I feel jittery |
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| I feel indecisive |
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| I am relaxed |
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| I feel content |
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| I am worried |
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| I feel confident |
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| I feel steady |
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| I feel pleasant |
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This questionnaire will be presented to participants in the French language, according to Gauthier et al. [30].
Pain assessment scale used before and after the endovascular intervention.
| Absence of pain |
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| Worst pain imaginable |
Participants will be asked to indicate the pain they currently feel on the pain scale (0 = absence of pain; 10 = worst pain imaginable).
Post-procedural remembered impressions.
| Pleasant |
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| Uncomfortable |
At the 3-month visit, participants will be asked to indicate their current feelings related to the intervention on the following scale (0 = pleasant; 10 = uncomfortable)
If needed, would you be ready to repeat the experience?
Yes / Maybe / No.
Fig 2Study flowchart.