Pain Management After Surgical Tonsillectomy: Is There a Favorable Analgesic?

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine how ibuprofen and paracetamol prevent pain after cold-steel extracapsular tonsillectomy in children. Also, we examined the relation between age, gender, nausea, postoperative bleeding, antibiotic use, type of diet, and postoperative pain intensity and the type of administered analgesic. A prospective study was conducted on 147 children (95 males and 52 females, aged 7-17 years) who underwent tonsillectomy in the Clinical-Hospital Center “Dragiša Mišović” from January 1 to June 30, 2016. The degree of pain was measured using a visual analog scale (VAS). We did not observe any significant differences in postoperative nausea, hospitalization rate postoperative bleeding, and antibiotic use between the paracetamol and ibuprofen groups. A test of within-patient effects showed that VAS scores changed significantly during the postoperative follow-up period (P =.00), but there were no significant differences between the groups (P =.778). After 12 hours, 29.3% of the patients on paracetamol and 21.8% on ibuprofen were transferred to a soft diet; after 24 hours, 84.8% of the paracetamol group and 85.5% of the ibuprofen group were on a soft diet (χ2 test, P

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Jotić, A., Savić Vujović, K., Milovanović, J., Vujović, A., Radin, Z., Milić, N., … Prostran, M. (2019). Pain Management After Surgical Tonsillectomy: Is There a Favorable Analgesic? Ear, Nose and Throat Journal, 98(6), 356–361. https://doi.org/10.1177/0145561319846065

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