Evaluation of prilocaine for the reduction of pain associated with transmucosal
anesthetic administration.
Author(s): Kramp LF, Eleazer PD, Scheetz JP.
Affiliation(s): Department of Periodontics, Endodontics, and Dental Hygiene, University of
Louisville, Kentucky 40292, USA.
Publication date & source: 1999, Anesth Prog. , 46(2):52-5
This investigation evaluated the use and efficacy of prilocaine HCl (4% plain
Citanest) for minimizing pain associated with the intraoral administration of
local anesthesia. Clinical anecdotes support the hypothesis that prilocaine
without a vasoconstrictor reduces pain during injection. To determine relative
injection discomfort, use of 4% plain prilocaine was compared with use of 2%
lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine and 2% mepivacaine with 1:20,000
levonordefrin. Prior to routine endodontic procedures, 150 adult patients
received 0.3 to 1.8 mL of local anesthetic via the same gauge needle without the
use of a topical local anesthetic. Injection methods included buccal
infiltration, labial infiltration, palatal infiltration, and inferior alveolar
nerve block. Following each injection, patients were asked to describe the level
of discomfort by scoring on a visual analog scale of 1 to 10, where 1 = painless
and 10 = severe pain. Analyses via 2-way analysis of variance revealed no
interaction between anesthetic and site of injection. However, there were
statistically significant differences among the injection sites. Post hoc
analysis revealed that prilocaine was associated with significantly less pain
perception when compared to mepivacaine and lidocaine. These results suggest that
differences in initial pain perception during transmucosal injection may be a
function of the local anesthetic use, and prilocaine can produce less discomfort
than the others tested.
|