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Showing 4 results for Intramuscular

Aa Abdollahi (msc), B.arya (m.d), M.j.golalipour (ph.d), M.a.vakili (m.sc),
Volume 3, Issue 2 (9-2001)
Abstract

Pain is a symptom of disease and most diseases accompanied with pain, specially among hospitalized post-operative patients. Several drugs and routes of administrations have used for post operative pain control. We compared post op analgesic effects of Diclofenac suppository to intramuscular Pethedine in post op inguinal herniorrhaphy patients. This study is a clinical trial on 40 patients who were operated due to unilateral inguinal herniorrhaphy. They divided into two groups incidentally. In Diclofenac Na group each patient received 100 mg Diclofenac Na supp every 8 hours. In Pethedine group each patient received 0.5 mg/kg Pethedine, intramuscularly. Pain severity of the patients controlled for 24 hours with visual comparation method and mean pain severity compared among 2 groups in the first 24 hours. Mean pain severity difference of Pethedine groups patients compared to Diclofenac Na group was 6.10 with standard error of 3.57 with (P<0.212) had no meaningful difference during first post operative phase. We concluded that Diclofenac Na is a suitable substitute of 24 hours intramuscular Pethedine for post op pain relief.
H.khodam (m.sc), T.ziaee (m.sc), S.a.hosseini (m.sc),
Volume 4, Issue 1 (3-2002)
Abstract

Compared with older children and adults, neonates are more sensitive to pain and more vulnerable to long-term effects. Despite the clinical importance of neonatal pain, current medical practices continue to expose infants to repetitive, acute, or prolonged pains. This specific intervention are necessary for reduced the neonatal pain experiences. This is an experimental study of determine the effectiveness of skin contact between mother and her healthy full-term newborn to reduce pain experience by the infant during intramuscular injection. The sample population was 30 healthy full-term newborns delivered at university hospital in Gorgan. The samples and controls were chosen randomly. During intramuscular injection case group was being helped by their mothers under cloth that directly were contact with their abdominal and chest skin and newborn in control group swaddled in crib on the bed before, after and during injection. Behavioral responses (Facial changes, crying, …) and physiologic responses (Heart rate and O2 saturation of arterial blood) of newborns were noted before, after and during intramuscular injection. The results show that there was no significant difference in behavioral and physiologic responses caused by pain between two groups, except crying time (38.2 second in control group and 35.5 second in case group). Finding from this study indicate that skin-to-skin contact has a clinically important effect on the pain of intramuscular injection, if we can prepare physically and emotionally a good situation.
S.kadkhodayan (md), F.vahid-Roodsary (md),
Volume 7, Issue 2 (10-2005)
Abstract

Background&Objective: Up to seventh week of gestation, progesterone secreted from the ovary is necessary to preserve the pregnancy. In the ART cycles GnRH-a is prescribed and oocytes and granulosa cells or retrieved, both causes corpus luteum insufficiency, so corpus luteum should be supported the best way is progesterone prescription. In this research we compare intramuscular and intravaginal suppositoar forms of progesterone for preserve the pregnancy. Materials&Methods: A prospective cross sectional evaluation on 193 patients was designed. All of them were on IVF or ICSI cycles. The patients were randomly divided into two groups. Intramuscular progesterone was prescribed in 138 and intravaginal progesterone (supp cyclogest) in 54 patients. The outcome of pregnancy was analyzed using statistical trials including t-test and chi-squre. Results: The two groups were similar duo to age – the ethiology causes of infertility – the doses of proscribed HMG ampule – FSH titrago – the number and grade of transferred embryos. The day after HCG presciption until the end the seventh week in the first group (138 patients) intramuscular progestrone (50 mg /bid) and in the secound group (54 Patients) supp of cyclogest (400 mg / bid) was prescnbed. The rate of positive pregnancy test, abortion, successful poegnancy in this two groups were similar. Conclusion: Intramuscular or intravaginal progesterone for supporting corpus luteum in IVF or ICSI cycles has the same effect but the intramuscular route is cheaper.
Alireza Moharreri, Hosein Nasiri, Mehrdad Jahanshahi, Hosein Rahmani, Aliakbar Abdollahi, Mohammadreza Rabiei,
Volume 9, Issue 3 (10-2007)
Abstract

Background & Objective: We have two areas in gluteal region for intramuscular injection‚ Ventrogluteal and Dorsogluteal. This study was done to compare pain intensity and bleeding rate after injection in Ventrogluteal and Dorsogluteal area.

 

Materials & Methods: This clinical trial study was done on 67 males in 5th Azar hospital in Gorgan north of Iran. Patients had 2 injections during 24 hours. For every patient one injection was done in Dorsogluteal area and the second injection was done in Ventrogluteal area. For every patients the pain intensity and rate of bleeding for every injections recorded. Data analyzed by SPSS-11.5 software and Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Wilcoxon tests.

 

Results: In Dorsogluteal area 83.5% of patients had a low and medium pain‚ where as in Ventrogluteal area 88% of patients had a low and medium pain and 9% of them had not any pain. The Mean±SD of pain intensity in Dorsogluteal area was 50.79±1.682 and in Ventrogluteal was 40.79±1.878. The Mean±SD of bleeding in Dorsogluteal and Ventrogluteal areas were 0.73±0.102 and 0.19±0.047 respectively. There were significant differences in pain intensity and bleeding between two groups (P<0.05).

 

Conclusion: We concluded that the injection in Ventrogluteal area has a less pain and bleeding rate in comparison with Dorsogluteal area.



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مجله دانشگاه علوم پزشکی گرگان Journal of Gorgan University of Medical Sciences
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