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The Impact of Massage and Reading on Children's Pain and Anxiety After Cardiovascular Surgery: A Pilot Study.

Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies
August 1, 2018
Sandra L Staveski et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the safety and feasibility of postoperative massage therapy in pediatric heart surgery patients and compare its effects on pain, anxiety, and medication exposure versus standard care with reading visits.

Results Summary

The study found no adverse events related to massage, no significant differences in pain or anxiety scores initially, but significantly lower anxiety scores at discharge and reduced benzodiazepine exposure in the massage group compared to controls.

Population

Pediatric heart surgery patients aged 6-18 years.

Effective Dosage

Not specified.

Duration

Interventions were administered during the immediate postoperative period, with follow-up at discharge (T3).

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
massage therapy
no change
Pain scores
pediatric heart surgery patients
no statistically significant difference
no statistically significant difference
#1
massage therapy
no change
State-Trait Anxiety scores
pediatric heart surgery patients
no statistically significant difference
no statistically significant difference
#2
massage therapy
decrease
State-Trait Anxiety scores
children receiving massage therapy
p = 0.0075
significantly lower
#3
massage therapy
no change
total opioid exposure
children receiving massage therapy
0.80 mg/kg morphine equivalents vs 1.13 mg/kg morphine equivalents
no difference
#4
massage therapy
decrease
total benzodiazepine exposure
children receiving massage therapy
0.002 mg/kg lorazepam equivalents vs 0.03 mg/kg lorazepam equivalents
significantly lower
#5
massage therapy
decrease
number of benzodiazepine PRN doses
children receiving massage therapy
0.5 PRN vs 2 PRNs
significantly lower
#6
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this pilot study was three-fold: 1) to evaluate the safety and feasibility of instituting massage therapy in the immediate postoperative period after congenital heart surgery, 2) to examine the preliminary results on effects of massage therapy versus standard of care plus three reading visits on postoperative pain and anxiety, and 3) to evaluate preliminary effects of opioid and benzodiazepine exposure in patients receiving massage therapy compared with reading controls. DESIGN: Prospective, randomized controlled trial. SETTING: An academic children's hospital. SUBJECTS: Sixty pediatric heart surgery patients between ages 6 and 18 years. INTERVENTIONS: Massage therapy and reading. MEASUREMENT AND MAIN RESULTS: There were no adverse events related to massage or reading interventions in either group. Our investigation found no statistically significant difference in Pain or State-Trait Anxiety scores in the initial 24 hours after heart surgery (T1) and within 48 hours of transfer to the acute care unit (T2) after controlling for age, gender, and Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery 1 score. However, children receiving massage therapy had significantly lower State-Trait Anxiety scores after receiving massage therapy at time of discharge (T3; p = 0.0075) than children receiving standard of care plus three reading visits. We found no difference in total opioid exposure during the first 3 postoperative days between groups (median [interquartile range], 0.80 mg/kg morphine equivalents [0.29-10.60] vs 1.13 mg/kg morphine equivalents [0.72-6.14]). In contrast, children receiving massage therapy had significantly lower total benzodiazepine exposure in the immediate 3 days following heart surgery (median [interquartile range], 0.002 mg/kg lorazepam equivalents [0-0.03] vs 0.03 mg/kg lorazepam equivalents [0.02-0.09], p = 0.0253, Wilcoxon rank-sum) and number of benzodiazepine PRN doses (0.5 [0-2.5] PRN vs 2 PRNs (1-4); p = 0.00346, Wilcoxon rank-sum). CONCLUSIONS: Our pilot study demonstrated the safety and feasibility of implementing massage therapy in the immediate postoperative period in pediatric heart surgery patients. We found decreased State-Trait Anxiety scores at discharge and lower total exposure to benzodiazepines. Preventing postoperative complications such as delirium through nonpharmacologic interventions warrants further evaluation.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdolescentAnalgesics, OpioidAnxietyChildFeasibility StudiesFemaleHeart Defects, CongenitalHumansIntensive Care Units, PediatricMaleMassagePain, PostoperativePilot ProjectsPostoperative CareReading
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy70/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations26
Citations/Year3.7
Relative Citation Ratio2.00
NIH Percentile74.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.25
Normalized Score0.81
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