Self-hypnotic relaxation during interventional radiological procedures : Effects on pain perception and intravenous drug use

The authors evaluated whether self-hypnotic relaxation can reduce the need for intravenous conscious sedation during interventional radiological procedures. Sixteen patients were randomized to a test group, and 14 patients were randomized to a control group. All had patient-controlled analgesia. Tes...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis 1996-04, Vol.44 (2), p.106-119
Hauptverfasser: LANG, E. V, JOYCE, J. S, SPIEGEL, D, HAMILTON, D, LEE, K. K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The authors evaluated whether self-hypnotic relaxation can reduce the need for intravenous conscious sedation during interventional radiological procedures. Sixteen patients were randomized to a test group, and 14 patients were randomized to a control group. All had patient-controlled analgesia. Test patients additionally had self-hypnotic relaxation and underwent a Hypnotic Induction Profile test. Compared to controls, test patients used less drugs (0.28 vs. 2.01 drug units; p < .01) and reported less pain (median pain rating 2 vs. 5 on a 0-10 scale; p < .01). Significantly more control patients exhibited oxygen desaturation and/or needed interruptions of their procedures for hemodynamic instability. Benefit did not correlate with hypnotizability. Self-hypnotic relaxation can reduce drug use and improve procedural safety.
ISSN:0020-7144
1744-5183
DOI:10.1080/00207149608416074