EN | RU
EN | RU

Help Support

Back

Paracetamol's effect on pain severity in office-based laryngeal procedures

Laryngeal procedures Laryngeal procedures
Laryngeal procedures Laryngeal procedures

This study explored whether taking Paracetamol before office-based laryngeal procedures can lower post-procedural pain scores.

See All

Key take away

Preprocedural Paracetamol significantly reduces pain severity after office-based laryngeal procedures.

Background

This study explored whether taking Paracetamol before office-based laryngeal procedures can lower post-procedural pain scores.

Method

A retrospective analysis of 100 patients who had laryngeal procedures without preprocedural analgesia was compared to a prospective group of 75 patients who received 1000 mg of Paracetamol before their procedure. Pain scores were recorded at 5-minute intervals for 30 minutes after the procedures.

Result

Both groups had similar rates of patients experiencing pain (47% for the no-analgesia group and 48% for the Paracetamol group). However, the Paracetamol group experienced a significant reduction in pain severity at all measured time points.

Conclusion

Administering 1000 mg of Paracetamol before office-based laryngeal procedures effectively attenuated pain severity, making it a beneficial preprocedural intervention for tackling postoperative discomfort.

Source:

Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery

Article:

Preprocedural Paracetamol Reduces Pain Scores in Patients Undergoing in-Office Laryngeal Procedures

Authors:

Mostafa Alwan et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en ru
Try: