Background: Children who undergo surgery frequently experience postoperative pain or POP. Pain experienced by children can be addressed as a basic human right. Because hospitals can be extremely stressful places for families and their children, pain, and discomfort associated with intrusive techniques can lengthen hospital stays for children and lead them to heal more slowly than they would have otherwise. Engaging the kids in intellectual pursuits is one way to use distraction techniques to take their minds off unpleasant stimuli and lessen their suffering.
Purpose: The current study's goal was to evaluate the impact of the distract technique on postoperative infants with cleft lip and palate who were between the ages of 1 and 3 years old.
Materials And Methods: The Saveetha Medical College and Hospital served as the host institution for the quantitative method with a preexperimental investigation.
Sampling Method: Convenience sampling was used to select 60 postoperative children with cleft lip and palate who were between the ages of one and three.
Interventions: One intervention group and a control group were randomly assigned to each of the 60 postoperative youngsters. Distract technique (tactile ball) was started for the intervention group 20 min prior to operation day and continued for 30 days. The first group (the control group) received standard care, which included analgesic medication. The second group (the intervention group) received no analgesic medication and was played with a tactile ball by a nurse who happened to be one of the researchers working in the pediatric unit where the study was conducted. Acetaminophen (10-15 mg/kg) was given to the children in the control group as an analgesic.
Results: The descriptive analysis ( > 0.05) did not reveal any statistically significant differences between the groups.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11426908 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jpbs.jpbs_566_24 | DOI Listing |
Chirurgie (Heidelb)
January 2025
Klinik für Mund‑, Kiefer- und Plastische Gesichtschirurgie, Zentrum für Zentrum für Lippen-Kiefer-Gaumenspalten und seltene oro-kranio-faziale Fehlbildungen, Universitätsmedizin Frankfurt, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590, Frankfurt am Main, Deutschland.
Background: Cleft lip and palate is the most frequent malformation in humans that requires surgical correction but is not primarily life-threatening. That is why in many economically not very well developed countries, special surgical care, such as for cleft lip and palate, is not guaranteed at all or is not sufficiently guaranteed, so that numerous aid organizations have been founded for over 50 years to provide help by organizing surgical aid missions. Even if this help seems primarily ethically harmless and very laudable, the lack of rules and instructions unfortunately regularly leads to the fact that legal, ethical and even medical treatment standards are often not observed to the detriment of the affected children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTurk J Pediatr
December 2024
Department of Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Türkiye.
Background: Any impediment to the development of midline structures i.e. hypothalamus, pituitary and oral cavity may cause anatomical and functional issues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCleft Palate Craniofac J
January 2025
Plastic and Oral Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to quantify analgesic use following alveolar cleft bone grafting (ABG) utilizing a posterior iliac crest (PIC) donor site.
Design: This is a prospective cohort study of consecutive patients that underwent ABG with PIC in a 10 month period from November 2022 to September 2023.
Setting: Tertiary care free-standing pediatric hospital.
J Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg
January 2025
Research & Evidence (RF&E), Vasant Kunj, New Delhi, India. Electronic address:
Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop
January 2025
Department of Orthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey. Electronic address:
Introduction: The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of the miniplate application sites in the maxilla and the applied force vector changes during skeletally supported facemask application in adolescent patients with unilateral cleft lip and palate (UCLP) using finite element model (FEM) analysis.
Methods: A FEM was obtained from a cone-beam computed tomography image of a 12-year-old female patient with UCLP. Miniplates were placed on 3 different sites of the maxilla; 500 g of advancement force was applied bilaterally, parallel (0°), and downward (-30°) to the occlusal plane.
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