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VAS Values (vas + value)
Selected AbstractsPostoperative discomfort associated with surgical and nonsurgical endodontic retreatmentDENTAL TRAUMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2000T. Kvist Abstract , Endodontic retreatment decision-making must include an appraisal of the costs of the different strategies proposed. In addition to direct costs, postoperative discomfort may have other consequences in terms of time off work, unscheduled visits and suffering. To establish a foundation for the appraisal of such indirect and intangible costs the present study was set up in which patients' assessments of pain and swelling after surgical and nonsurgical retreatment procedures were recorded. Ninety-two patients with 95 root-filled incisors and canine teeth exhibiting apical periodontitis were included in the study. The mode of retreatment was randomly assigned. Each day during the first post-treatment week patients assessed their degree of swelling and pain on horizontal 100-mm visual analog scales (VAS). The scales ranged from "no swelling" to "very severe swelling" and "no pain" to "intolerable pain", respectively. Consumption of self-prescribed analgesics and time off work were also recorded. Significantly more patients reported discomfort after surgical retreatment than after nonsurgical procedures. High pain scores were most frequent on the operative day while swelling reached its maximum on the first postoperative day followed by progressive decrease both in frequency and magnitude. Postoperative symptoms associated with nonsurgical retreatment were less frequent but reached high VAS values in single cases. Analgesics were significantly more often consumed after periapical surgery. Patients reported absence from work mainly due to swelling and discoloration of the skin. This was found to occur only after surgical retreatment. Conclusively, surgical retreatment resulted in more discomfort and tended to bring about greater indirect costs than nonsurgical retreatment. [source] Combined counseling and bupropion therapy for smoking cessation: identification of outcome predictorsDRUG DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, Issue 3 2006Maria Caterina Grassi Abstract Because some smoking-induced pathologies improve upon discontinuation, strategies have been developed to help smokers quit. The aim of this study was to measure the rate of smokers still abstinent one year after one cycle of a six-week group counseling given alone or in combination with a seven-week period of daily administration of bupropion. We also evaluated the predictor validity of nicotine dependence intensity at enrollment, administering both the Fageström Tolerance Questionnaire (FTQ) and the Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS). Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), to measure the intensity of "smoke craving," was also administered. Two hundred twenty-nine subjects trying to quit smoking were enrolled. Bupropion therapy was accepted by 110 subjects, but only 50 completed the 7-week cycle of therapy. Abstinence rates at one year were 68.0 and 56.6%, respectively, in the group that used bupropion for the scheduled 7 weeks and in the group that discontinued bupropion, and 35.3% in the group with counseling therapy alone. SDS (but not FTQ) scores at enrollment, VAS values for craving at the end of the program, and bupropion therapy were the variables selected by Linear Discriminant Analysis to assign subjects to the Smoker or Non-smoker group, with a global correctness of 70.9%. In conclusion, the efficacy of bupropion largely depends upon its interaction with psychological factors, such as the level of nicotine dependence, craving for nicotine, and the subject's commitment to quit smoking. Drug Dev. Res. 67:271,279, 2006. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Ineffectiveness of Local Wound Anesthesia to Reduce Postoperative Pain After Median SternotomyJOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, Issue 4 2005Diego Magnano M.D. Bupivacaine wound infiltration is frequently used to reduce the pain related to the surgical incision itself. In this randomized study, we investigated the efficacy of bupivacaine local anesthesia after median sternotomy to reduce postoperative pain. Forty-seven patients undergoing major cardiac surgery procedures were allocated randomly to group A (bupivacaine wound infiltration 0.5%; 10 mL, followed by continuous infusion: 10 mg/24 H) or to group C (controls). Extubation time, postoperative arterial blood gases, postoperative pain (assessed by means of a visual analog scale), and morphine consumption were the endpoints of the study. Patients of group C were extubated earlier; blood gases and VAS values were similar in both group. Bupivacaine local analgesia did not improve postoperative pain control after median sternotomy. [source] A new instrument for pain assessment in the immediate postoperative period,ANAESTHESIA, Issue 4 2009A. M. Machata Summary Perceptual-cognitive impairment after general anaesthesia may affect the ability to reliably report pain severity with the standard visual analog scale (VAS). To minimise these limitations, we developed ,PAULA the PAIN-METER®' (PAULA): it has five coloured emoticon faces on the forefront, it is twice as long as a standard VAS scale, and patients use a slider to mark their pain experience. Forty-eight postoperative patients rated descriptive pain terms on PAULA and on a standard VAS immediately after admission and before discharge from the postanaesthesia care unit. Visual acuity was determined before both assessments. The values obtained with PAULA showed less variance than those obtained with the standard VAS, even at the first assessment, where only 23% of the patients had regained their visual acuity. Furthermore, the deviations of the absolute VAS values in individual patients for each descriptive pain term were significantly smaller with PAULA than with the standard VAS. [source] |