Efficacy of Moderate Sedation for Dental Treatment of Young Children
Brief Summary
There is lack of clinical trials on pediatric dental sedation. The purpose of this study is to test (using a randomized controlled trial design) the hypothesis that young children behavior during dental treatment improves with oral midazolam sedation. A further aim of this study was is explore whether behavior also changes over sessions needed to dental treatment completion.
Intervention / Treatment
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Midazolam (DRUG)Oral midazolam 1.0 mg/kg (maximum 20 mg)
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Protective stabilization (BEHAVIORAL)Children will receive a protective stabilization (physical restrain) with sheet fixed with tapes.
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Midazolam, ketamine (DRUG)Combined oral midazolam (0.5 mg/kg) and ketamine (3 mg/kg) (MK)
Condition or Disease
- Dental Caries
- Child Behavior
- Conscious Sedation Failure During Procedure
Phase
Study Design
Study type: | INTERVENTIONAL |
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Status: | Completed |
Study results: | No Results Available |
Age: | 12 Months to 36 Months |
Enrollment: | 41 (ACTUAL) |
Funded by: | Other |
Allocation: | Randomized |
Primary Purpose: | Treatment |
Masking |
Clinical Trial Dates
Start date: | Jun 01, 2008 | |
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Primary Completion: | Dec 01, 2010 | ACTUAL |
Completion Date: | May 01, 2012 | ACTUAL |
Study First Posted: | May 15, 2009 | ESTIMATED |
Results First Posted: | Aug 31, 2020 | |
Last Updated: | Jan 15, 2015 |
Sponsors / Collaborators
Lead Sponsor:
Universidade Federal de Goias
Responsible Party:
N/A
Location
There is a lack of clinical trials on pediatric dental sedation in children 3 years old and under. We investigated whether young children's behavior improves during dental treatment with combined oral ketamine and midazolam compared to midazolam alone or no sedation. Healthy children under 36 months of age, presenting early childhood caries and referred to a pediatric dental sedation clinic were randomly assigned to receive combined midazolam (0.5 mg/kg) and ketamine (3 mg/kg) (MK), oral midazolam (1.0 mg/kg) (MS), or protective stabilization without sedative (PS). One observer scored children's behavior using the Ohio State University Behavior Rating Scale (OSUBRS) at determined points in a dental exam (no sedative) and treatment session. Data were analyzed using non-parametric bivariate tests.
Participant Groups
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Oral midazolam
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Combined midazolam and ketamine
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No drug or placebo administered
Eligibility Criteria
Sex: | All |
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Minimum Age: | 1 |
Maximum Age: | 3 |
Age Groups: | Child |
Healthy Volunteers: | Yes |
Inclusion Criteria:
* Healthy children (ASA PS 1)
* Children under 36 months old
* Children presenting early childhood caries
* Children with no history of dental treatment
Exclusion criteria:
* Lost to follow-up
* Healthy children (ASA PS 1)
* Children under 36 months old
* Children presenting early childhood caries
* Children with no history of dental treatment
Exclusion criteria:
* Lost to follow-up
Primary Outcomes
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Children's behavior at the dental office after they had dental rehabilitation of early childhood caries when they were under 3 years old 2 years
Secondary Outcomes
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Efficacy of oral sedation with midazolam during children's dental treatment comparing to protective stabilization 1 month
More Details
NCT Number: | NCT00902395 |
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Other IDs: | UFG SAP 18189 |
Study URL: | https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT00902395 |
Last updated: Sep 29, 2023