Üstün Nilüfer, Akgöl Beyza Ballı, Bayram Merve
Faculty of Dentistry, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Istanbul Health and Technology University, Istanbul, Turkey.
School of Dentistry, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Antalya Bilim University, Antalya, Turkey.
BMC Oral Health. 2025 Mar 24;25(1):425. doi: 10.1186/s12903-025-05770-4.
This randomized crossover clinical trial designed to evaluate the impact of visual and auditory distraction techniques on pediatric patients' anxiety, pain perception, and behavior during dental treatment. The study specifically focuses on children, aiming to determine whether distraction methods can effectively reduce anxiety levels, alleviate pain experiences, and improve cooperative behavior in a clinical setting.
Children aged 4 to 9 years receiving routine dental care at the Pediatric Dentistry Clinic, Istanbul Medipol University, were randomly assigned to Group 1 (distraction first, then tell-show-do) or Group 2 (tell-show-do first, then distraction), with a two-week washout period before switching interventions. Anxiety was assessed using the Venham Picture Test and pulse rate, pain perception with the Sounds, Eyes, and Motor Scale during local anesthesia and the Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale during treatment, while cooperation and behavior were evaluated using the Houpt Scale. Statistical analysis was conducted using Mann-Whitney U, Student's t-test, Paired t-test, and Wilcoxon test, with the significance level set at 0.025 using the Bonferroni correction.
Sixty-eight patients (37 female, 31 male) with a mean age of 6.69 ± 1.08 years completed the study (Group 1: n = 32, Group 2: n = 36). The cartoon-assisted distraction technique did not significantly reduce anxiety compared to the tell-show-do method. A non-significant reduction in pain perception was observed during local anesthesia with distraction. However, this technique significantly reduced self-reported pain during treatment (p < 0.025) and improved child cooperation and behavior.
Cartoon-assisted visual and auditory distraction can alleviate pain perception and improve behavior during pediatric dental procedures. However, it does not appear to reduce dental anxiety or pain perception during local anesthesia. Integrating this technique with the traditional tell-show-do approach may enhance the pediatric dental experience.
The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT04927754, 06/01/2021.
本随机交叉临床试验旨在评估视觉和听觉分心技术对儿童患者在牙科治疗期间的焦虑、疼痛感知及行为的影响。该研究特别聚焦于儿童,旨在确定分心方法能否在临床环境中有效降低焦虑水平、减轻疼痛体验并改善合作行为。
在伊斯坦布尔梅迪波尔大学儿科牙科诊所接受常规牙科护理的4至9岁儿童被随机分配到第1组(先分心,然后采用告知 - 展示 - 操作法)或第2组(先采用告知 - 展示 - 操作法,然后分心),在转换干预措施前有两周的洗脱期。使用韦纳姆图片测试和脉搏率评估焦虑,在局部麻醉期间使用声音、眼睛和运动量表以及在治疗期间使用面部表情疼痛评分量表评估疼痛感知,同时使用豪普特量表评估合作与行为。采用曼 - 惠特尼U检验、学生t检验、配对t检验和威尔科克森检验进行统计分析,使用邦费罗尼校正将显著性水平设定为0.025。
68名患者(37名女性,31名男性),平均年龄6.69±1.08岁,完成了研究(第1组:n = 32,第2组:n = 36)。与告知 - 展示 - 操作法相比,卡通辅助分心技术并未显著降低焦虑。在分心的局部麻醉期间,观察到疼痛感知有不显著的降低。然而,该技术在治疗期间显著降低了自我报告的疼痛(p < 0.025),并改善了儿童的合作与行为。
卡通辅助的视觉和听觉分心可减轻儿童牙科治疗过程中的疼痛感知并改善行为。然而,它似乎并未降低局部麻醉期间的牙科焦虑或疼痛感知。将该技术与传统的告知 - 展示 - 操作方法相结合可能会提升儿童牙科治疗体验。
该试验在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册,编号为NCT04927754,注册日期为2021年1月6日。