Treating pediatric post-tonsillectomy pain and nausea with complementary and alternative medicine.
Study Goal
The researchers evaluated the potential role of chewing gum as a complementary therapy for postoperative pain management in children undergoing tonsillectomy.
Results Summary
The study recommended against the use of chewing gum, suggesting insufficient evidence or potential drawbacks, though it noted all examined interventions were cost-effective and safe.
Population
Children undergoing tonsillectomy.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
honey | decrease | postoperative pain and nausea | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | have the greatest amount of evidence for | #1 |
acupuncture | decrease | postoperative pain and nausea | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | have the greatest amount of evidence for | #2 |
complementary and alternative therapies | increase | analgesia | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | suggest merit for these treatments as adjuvant therapies that can enhance | #3 |
complementary and alternative therapies | decrease | controversial medications | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | suggest merit for these treatments as adjuvant therapies that can decrease requirements of | #4 |
all interventions examined | no change | cost-effective | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | were | #5 |
all interventions examined | no change | safe | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | were | #6 |
hydrogen peroxide rinses | neutral | - | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | recommend against | #7 |
chewing gum | neutral | - | children undergoing tonsillectomy | - | recommend against | #8 |
OBJECTIVES: Although tonsillectomy is a common and largely safe procedure, pain management in children remains a controversial topic. In addition to the challenge of choosing appropriate analgesia, there is often low parent and child adherence. This article presents a review, and evaluates the potential role, of a range of complementary and alternative therapies that may be sought out by parents. METHODS: A literature review of complementary and alternative interventions performed using PubMed, Cochrane Library, and EMBASE, supplemented by searches from Google and hand searches of cross-references of selected articles, yielded 32 studies for qualitative analysis. RESULTS: The studies included for analysis investigated a wide variety of alternative treatment modalities: acupuncture and related therapies, aromatherapy, homeopathy, honey, intravenous fluid, speech therapy, hyaluronic acid, behavioral therapies, ice/cold, hydrogen peroxide rinse, and chewing gum. CONCLUSION: At this time, stronger conclusions cannot be made about the therapies investigated because there are many methodology limitations of the studies analyzed. However, our results suggest merit for these treatments as adjuvant therapies that can enhance analgesia and decrease requirements of controversial medications. Honey and acupuncture have the greatest amount of evidence for postoperative pain and nausea; however, all interventions examined were cost-effective and safe. We recommend against hydrogen peroxide rinses and chewing gum. Laryngoscope, 2625-2634, 2018.