One hundred seventy-nine patients with asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic endodontic disease had single-visit therapy and were given either diflunisal (n = 94) or aspirin with codeine (n = 85) to control posttreatment pain. In this open-label, randomized study, diflunisal was judged superior to the aspirin-codeine combination in all major categories evaluated. Of patients receiving diflunisal, 93.6% needed the medication for only one day. In contrast, 77.7% of patients receiving aspirin with codeine needed the medication for only one day. Almost 64% of patients receiving diflunisal needed only one dose, while 32.9% of patients using aspirin with codeine needed only one dose. Four or more doses were required by 5.3% of patients receiving diflunisal and by 23.5% of patients receiving the aspirin-codeine combination. In patients receiving diflunisal, 20.2% experienced side effects. In contrast, 29.4% of patients receiving aspirin with codeine reported side effects. Thirty-five percent of patients receiving diflunisal rated the analgesic as excellent; 5.3% rated it as fair or poor. In contrast, 12.9% of patients receiving aspirin with codeine rated the analgesic combination as excellent; another 12.9% rated it as fair or poor. Diflunisal was found to be generally effective and well-tolerated, and superior to aspirin with codeine in the management of pain from endodontic treatment.

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