• J Oral Facial Pain Headache · Jan 2014

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study

    Ketoprofen is more effective than diclofenac after oral surgery when used as a preemptive analgesic: a pilot study.

    • Grace Carolaine Esquivel Velásquez, Luis A German Santa Cruz, and Mario Alberto Isiordia Espinoza.
    • J Oral Facial Pain Headache. 2014 Jan 1;28(2):153-8.

    AimTo evaluate the preemptive analgesia of ketoprofen in comparison with diclofenac after mandibular third molar surgery.MethodsThis study was a double-blind, randomized clinical trial. Forty patients were randomized into two treatment groups (each with 20 patients) by using a series of random numbers: group A received ketoprofen 100 mg and group B received diclofenac 75 mg, all intramuscularly. Surgery was done 30 minutes after analgesic treatments. The durations of analgesia, pain intensity, analgesic consumption, and side effects were evaluated. The statistical analysis was done using the chi-square, Student t, Mann-Whitney U, and Log-Rank tests.ResultsThe duration of analgesia was longer in the ketoprofen group when compared with the diclofenac group. The number of patients taking the first rescue analgesic at 6 hours was lower in the ketoprofen group in comparison with the diclofenac group. Patients who received ketoprofen had lower pain intensity compared with patients who received diclofenac.ConclusionIntramuscular ketoprofen 100 mg is more effective than intramuscular diclofenac 75 mg after mandibular third molar extraction when used as a preemptive analgesic.

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