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Ulus Travma Acil Cer · May 2010
Usage of lidocaine-prilocaine cream in the treatment of postburn pain in pediatric patients.
- Eksal Kargi and Bülent Tekerekoğlu.
- Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, Zonguldak Karaelmas University, Zonguldak, Turkey. eksalkargi@gmail.com
- Ulus Travma Acil Cer. 2010 May 1;16(3):229-32.
BackgroundFacial burns are quite common among children. Many different wound-covers can be used for dressing burn wounds, which is usually painful for the patients. These covers can also be combined with local anesthetic creams. Lidocaine-prilocaine cream 5% (LPC) is commonly used as a topical anesthetic by physicians performing plastic surgery. In the present study, we investigated the effects of topical LPC on pain cessation in pediatric patients with face burn and compared results with a control group in which LPC was not used in the wound dressing.MethodsThirty pediatric patients (average age 11.3, range 8-15) among those who admitted to our emergency service and plastic surgery outpatient clinic between 2003 and 2006 were included in this study. The patient's burned areas ranged between 1 and 5% percent of their total body surface.ResultsThe need for analgesic medicine was recorded in the first, second and third 8-hour periods postburn in both groups, and pain level was evaluated at these time points using a verbal rating scale. There was a significant difference between the two groups with respect to values of the first and second 8-hour periods, while in the third 8-hour period, no significant difference was observed. We conclude that topical local anesthetics administered for 16 hours postburn significantly reduce the duration of pain after injury, which suggests a potential use in clinical practice in the treatment of children with face burn.ConclusionWhile LPC was found to have an ameliorating effect in the first 16 hours, we recommend oral analgesic co-therapy support since it loses its efficacy in the last 8-hour period.
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