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Postoperative Pain: An Analysis on Evolution of Research in Half-Century
Authors:Ali Nosrat  Omid Dianat  Prashant Verma  Donald R. Nixdorf  Alan S. Law
Affiliation:1. Division of Endodontics, Department of Advanced Oral Sciences and Therapeutics, School of Dentistry, University of Maryland Baltimore, Maryland;2. Private Practice, Centreville Endodontics, Centreville, Virginia;3. Private Practice, Capitol Endodontics, Washington, DC;4. Division of TMD and Orofacial Pain, School of Dentistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota;6. Department of Neurology, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota;5. HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research, Bloomington, Minnesota;7. Division of Endodontics, School of Dentistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Abstract:IntroductionExamining the evolution of research parameters helps scientists to discover the well-developed and neglected aspects of knowledge. Pain after root canal treatment is a health problem affecting millions of patients. Research in this field has a meaningful impact on quality of lives. The aim of this study was to analyze the evolution of research on postoperative pain over the past 50 years.MethodsElectronic searches were performed in Scopus and MEDLINE databases to identify studies on pain after nonsurgical root canal treatments/retreatments. The full texts of eligible articles were reviewed to determine the study category and to extract and analyze the methodological variables. A series of statistical analyses were performed to determine the trend of publications based on the variable of interest over time.ResultsFour hundred twenty-four articles were included. There was a positive trend for systematic reviews, studies with sample size <200, studies on single-visit treatment, and clinical trials on instrumentation and adjunct treatments (P < .05). There was a negative trend for the use of numeric rating scales, studies on multiple-visit treatments, clinical trials on medication/medicament, and studies on pain in maxillary incisors (P < .05). No trend was observed based on pulpal diagnosis or for studies with longer observation periods (>8 weeks) (P > .05).ConclusionsA paradigm shift is needed toward clinical studies with larger sample sizes, longer observation periods, and more focus on pulpal diagnoses associated with higher rates of postoperative pain. There is a need to view postoperative pain as an important patient-centered outcome and to develop and disseminate standard reporting guidelines for future studies.
Keywords:Big data analytics  endodontics  evolution  pain  trend  science
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