Local Ketamine Improves Postoperative Analgesia After Third Molar Surgery Article uri icon

abstract

  • Purpose: Evidence exists to support the peripheral analgesic effect of local administration of ketamine (LAK) after third molar surgery. The aim of the present systematic review and meta-analysis was to determine the efficacy of LAK in the control of pain, swelling, and trismus after third molar surgery. Materials and Methods: The study design was a systematic review with a meta-analysis of the effect of LAK after third molar surgery. A search in electronic databases was performed from September 2017 to February 2019. Only prospective clinical trials and randomized controlled trials that had evaluated LAK after third molar surgery were included. The meta-analysis was based on the random effects model. The outcome measures evaluated were postoperative acute pain, swelling, and trismus. The estimated overall effect size was a standardized mean difference (SMD). Results: A total of 110 study subjects (men and women aged 18 to 50 years) were evaluated for the analgesic effect. The SMD showed a significant analgesic effect (postoperative pain control) favoring LAK (SMD, −1.7403; 95%25 confidence interval [CI], −2.45 to −1.04). Evaluation of the anti-inflammatory effect of LAK included 105 study subjects and resulted in significantly less swelling in the first postoperative day (SMD, −0.6169; 95%25 CI, −1.1654 to −0.0683). However, LAK did not reduce the incidence of trismus after third molar surgery (SMD, −0.7241; 95%25 CI, −2.2765 to 0.8284). Conclusions: The use of LAK can reduce the incidence and severity of postoperative pain after third molar surgery and had an anti-inflammatory effect, although only in the first postoperative day. However, LAK had no effect on trismus reduction after third molar surgery. © 2019 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons

publication date

  • 2019-01-01