Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine

Objectives: The aim was to compare the effectiveness of intra-articular lidocaine (IAL) versus intravenous Demerol and Diazepam (IVS) in reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocation. Design: This is a prospective randomized study. Setting: Emergency room setting. Patients: Thirty-one di...

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Main Authors: Cheok, C.Y., Mohamad, J.A., Ahmad, T.S.
Format: Article
Published: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2011
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/3510/
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spelling my.um.eprints.35102012-07-20T01:22:27Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/3510/ Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine Cheok, C.Y. Mohamad, J.A. Ahmad, T.S. R Medicine Objectives: The aim was to compare the effectiveness of intra-articular lidocaine (IAL) versus intravenous Demerol and Diazepam (IVS) in reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocation. Design: This is a prospective randomized study. Setting: Emergency room setting. Patients: Thirty-one dislocations reduced with IVS, whereas 32 patients were reduced using IAL. Main Outcome Measurements: The visual analog pain scale was used before analgesic administration and during the closed manipulative reduction. Length of time since dislocation, frequency of dislocation, ease of reduction, patient satisfaction, adverse effects, and duration of hospitalization were recorded. Results: The IVS group had a 100% success rate, whereas the IAL group had a 19% (six of 32) failure rate (P = 0.024). However, there was no significant difference in terms of pain relief (P = 0.23) or patient satisfaction (P = 0.085) between both groups. In addition, patients in the IAL group had a shorter duration of hospitalization and no reported complications, whereas the intravenous group had a longer hospital stay and a 29% complication rate. The cost of IAL was 32% less than the cost for IVS. Conclusion: IAL was more cost effective than the IVS method. IAL provided adequate pain relief and fewer complications and is a viable option for analgesia during reduction of acute shoulder dislocation. Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2011-01 Article PeerReviewed Cheok, C.Y. and Mohamad, J.A. and Ahmad, T.S. (2011) Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine. Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma, 25 (1). pp. 5-10. ISSN 0890-5339 doi: 10.1097/BOT.0b013e3181d3d338
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Cheok, C.Y.
Mohamad, J.A.
Ahmad, T.S.
Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
description Objectives: The aim was to compare the effectiveness of intra-articular lidocaine (IAL) versus intravenous Demerol and Diazepam (IVS) in reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocation. Design: This is a prospective randomized study. Setting: Emergency room setting. Patients: Thirty-one dislocations reduced with IVS, whereas 32 patients were reduced using IAL. Main Outcome Measurements: The visual analog pain scale was used before analgesic administration and during the closed manipulative reduction. Length of time since dislocation, frequency of dislocation, ease of reduction, patient satisfaction, adverse effects, and duration of hospitalization were recorded. Results: The IVS group had a 100% success rate, whereas the IAL group had a 19% (six of 32) failure rate (P = 0.024). However, there was no significant difference in terms of pain relief (P = 0.23) or patient satisfaction (P = 0.085) between both groups. In addition, patients in the IAL group had a shorter duration of hospitalization and no reported complications, whereas the intravenous group had a longer hospital stay and a 29% complication rate. The cost of IAL was 32% less than the cost for IVS. Conclusion: IAL was more cost effective than the IVS method. IAL provided adequate pain relief and fewer complications and is a viable option for analgesia during reduction of acute shoulder dislocation.
format Article
author Cheok, C.Y.
Mohamad, J.A.
Ahmad, T.S.
author_facet Cheok, C.Y.
Mohamad, J.A.
Ahmad, T.S.
author_sort Cheok, C.Y.
title Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
title_short Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
title_full Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
title_fullStr Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
title_full_unstemmed Pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
title_sort pain relief for reduction of acute anterior shoulder dislocations: a prospective randomized study comparing intravenous sedation with intra-articular lidocaine
publisher Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins
publishDate 2011
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/3510/
_version_ 1643687135831654400
score 13.211869