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Effect of music therapy on pain and anxiety during third molar surgery
Olaopa, Olusegun Israel; Gbolahan, Olalere O; Olusanya, Adeola A; Fasola, Abiodun Olubayo; Arotiba, Juwon Tunde.
Affiliation
  • Olaopa, Olusegun Israel; Federal Medical Centre. Department of Dental Services. Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Unit. Lagos State. NG
  • Gbolahan, Olalere O; University College Hospital. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Oyo State. NG
  • Olusanya, Adeola A; University College Hospital. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Oyo State. NG
  • Fasola, Abiodun Olubayo; University College Hospital. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Oyo State. NG
  • Arotiba, Juwon Tunde; University College Hospital. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Oyo State. NG
Braz. j. oral sci ; 23: e242741, 2024. ilus
Article in English | LILACS, BBO - Dentistry | ID: biblio-1561755
Responsible library: BR218.1
ABSTRACT
Music therapy has been used with promising results to reduce pain and anxiety in surgical specialties. It is suggested to reduce anxiety and pain perception during dental surgeries and thereby improving clinical outcomes.

Aim:

The aim of this study is to determine whether listening to music during trans-alveolar mandibular third molar extraction reduces pain perception and anxiety.

Methods:

One hundred and forty-six adult participants were randomized into music and non-music groups, with each group comprising seventy-three participants. Each participant had trans-alveolar third molar extraction with or without music intervention depending on the group randomly assigned. Pain scores of participants were measured at one minute after consent, during and after administration of local anaesthetic, during osteotomy, after tooth delivery, and one minute after flap closure. Postoperative pain scores were recorded at one-hour, 3-hour, 6-hour, 24-hour and 48-hour after the last stitch. Pre- and post-operative anxiety scores were also recorded. Descriptive statistics was used to describe sociodemographic data. Student t-test was used to compare the mean of quantitative variables between the groups while chi-square test was used to compare proportions and to investigate association between categorical variables. The statistical significance was defined at p<0.05.

Results:

The study showed similar sociodemographic characteristics, baseline clinical features and duration of surgery between groups. Pain score peaked during local anaesthetic administration (p = 0.254) and at 3 hours after surgery (p = 0.170) but no statistically significant difference was observed in the mean pain score. The mean anxiety scores also revealed no statistically significant differences.

Conclusion:

Music was found to add no significant anxiolytic and adjunctive analgesic benefit to participants who underwent third molar surgeries in this study
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: BBO - Dentistry / LILACS Main subject: Anxiety / Pain / Tooth Extraction / Oral Surgical Procedures / Molar, Third / Music Therapy Limits: Adult / Female / Humans / Male Language: English Journal: Braz. j. oral sci Journal subject: Dentistry Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Nigeria / Turkey Institution/Affiliation country: Federal Medical Centre/NG / University College Hospital/NG

Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: BBO - Dentistry / LILACS Main subject: Anxiety / Pain / Tooth Extraction / Oral Surgical Procedures / Molar, Third / Music Therapy Limits: Adult / Female / Humans / Male Language: English Journal: Braz. j. oral sci Journal subject: Dentistry Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Nigeria / Turkey Institution/Affiliation country: Federal Medical Centre/NG / University College Hospital/NG
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