Pain after Licorice or Sugar-Water Gargling in Patients Recovering from Oropharyngeal Surgery-A Randomized, Double-Blind Trial.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Journal of Personalized Medicine Pub Date : 2024-10-12 DOI:10.3390/jpm14101056
Marita Windpassinger, Michal Prusak, Jana Gemeiner, Olga Plattner, Stefan Janik, Gerold Besser, Wolfgang Gstoettner, Pu Xuan, Daniel I Sessler, Kurt Ruetzler
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Abstract

Background: Glycyrrhiza glabrata (licorice) is used in traditional medicine and herbal remedies and reduces sore throats consequent to intubation, but whether it is protective for more intense pain after oropharyngeal surgery remains unclear. We thus tested the joint hypothesis that gargling with licorice, which has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, reduces postoperative pain and morphine consumption.

Methods: We enrolled patients having elective oropharyngeal surgery. Participants were randomly allocated to gargle with either 1 g licorice or a sugar placebo before and for up to three days after surgery. A numerical rating scale (NRS) for pain along with morphine consumption was evaluated every 30 min during the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) stay and then three times daily for three days. We pre-specified that licorice gargling would be deemed better than sugar gargling only if found non-inferior on both morphine consumption and pain score and superior on at least one of the two.

Results: 65 patients were randomized to the licorice group and 61 to placebo. We found noninferiority (NI) in pain scores with an estimated mean difference of -0.09 (95.2% CI: -0.88, 0.70; p = 0.001; NI delta = 1) between licorice and placebo gargling. There were no adverse events reported in either group that required treatment discontinuation.

Conclusions: Gargling with licorice did not significantly or meaningfully reduce postoperative pain or morphine consumption in patients recovering from oropharyngeal surgery. While higher doses might prove more effective, our results suggest that other topical analgesics should be considered.

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甘草或糖水漱口后口腔咽部手术康复患者的疼痛--一项随机双盲试验。
背景:甘草被用于传统医学和草药疗法中,可减轻插管导致的咽喉疼痛,但甘草是否对口咽手术后的剧烈疼痛具有保护作用仍不清楚。因此,我们对甘草漱口能减轻术后疼痛并减少吗啡用量这一共同假设进行了测试:我们招募了择期口咽手术患者。方法:我们招募了择期口咽手术患者,随机分配患者在手术前和手术后三天内用 1 克甘草或糖安慰剂漱口。在麻醉后护理病房(PACU)住院期间,每隔 30 分钟对疼痛评分表(NRS)和吗啡消耗量进行一次评估,然后在三天内每天评估三次。我们预先指定,只有在吗啡消耗量和疼痛评分两方面均无劣势,且至少在其中一项上具有优势时,甘草漱口才会被视为优于糖漱口:65 名患者被随机分配到甘草组,61 名患者被随机分配到安慰剂组。我们发现甘草漱口与安慰剂漱口在疼痛评分方面无劣效性(NI),估计平均差异为-0.09(95.2% CI:-0.88,0.70;P = 0.001;NI delta = 1)。两组患者均未出现需要停止治疗的不良反应:结论:用甘草漱口并不能显著或有意义地减轻口咽手术恢复期患者的术后疼痛或吗啡消耗量。虽然加大剂量可能会更有效,但我们的结果表明应考虑使用其他局部镇痛药。
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来源期刊
Journal of Personalized Medicine
Journal of Personalized Medicine Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1878
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Personalized Medicine (JPM; ISSN 2075-4426) is an international, open access journal aimed at bringing all aspects of personalized medicine to one platform. JPM publishes cutting edge, innovative preclinical and translational scientific research and technologies related to personalized medicine (e.g., pharmacogenomics/proteomics, systems biology). JPM recognizes that personalized medicine—the assessment of genetic, environmental and host factors that cause variability of individuals—is a challenging, transdisciplinary topic that requires discussions from a range of experts. For a comprehensive perspective of personalized medicine, JPM aims to integrate expertise from the molecular and translational sciences, therapeutics and diagnostics, as well as discussions of regulatory, social, ethical and policy aspects. We provide a forum to bring together academic and clinical researchers, biotechnology, diagnostic and pharmaceutical companies, health professionals, regulatory and ethical experts, and government and regulatory authorities.
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