0000000000243800

AUTHOR

Francesco Cavallin

showing 2 related works from this author

Analgesics for Dental Implants: A Systematic Review

2021

Postsurgical pain is commonly associated with dental and oral surgery, and the use of analgesics has been investigated in the management of postoperative pain. This systematic review summarizes available evidence on analgesics used to manage dental implant surgery postoperative pain, to identify best therapeutic protocols and knowledge gap. A comprehensive search was conducted including MEDLINE/Pubmed, EMBASE, SCOPUS, clinicaltrials.gov, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through May 2020. Only randomized controlled trials were included. PRISMA guidelines were followed, and risk of bias was appraised using Cochrane RoB2 tool. Eleven trials (762 patients overall) were included. …

medicine.medical_specialtyRandomizationOral surgerymedicine.medical_treatmentMEDLINEPlacebolaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled trialsystematic reviewlawMedicinePharmacology (medical)painDental implantPharmacologydental implantbusiness.industrylcsh:RM1-950analgesics; dental implant; pain; post-operative pain; systematic review030206 dentistryRescue medicationSystematic reviewpost-operative painlcsh:Therapeutics. PharmacologyPhysical therapyanalgesicsbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Pharmacology
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Supraglottic airway devices for surfactant treatment: systematic review and meta-analysis

2019

Objective: To compare surfactant administration via supraglottic airway device (SAD) vs. nasal CPAP alone or INSURE. Study design: A systematic search of PubMed, EMBASE, SCOPUS, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Clinicaltrials.gov was performed. Articles meeting inclusion criteria (RCT, surfactant administration via SAD, laryngeal mask, I-gel) were assessed Results: Five RCTs were eligible. Surfactant administration via SAD reduced the need for intubation/mechanical ventilation (RR 0.57, 95%CI 0.38–0.85) and short-term oxygen requirements (MD −8.00, 95%CI −11.09 to −4.91) compared to nCPAP alone. Surfactant administration via SAD reduced the need for intubation/mechanical v…

medicine.medical_treatmentLaryngeal Maskslaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled trialPulmonary surfactantlaw030225 pediatricsmedicineIntubation IntratrachealIntubationHumans030212 general & internal medicineRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicMechanical ventilationSupraglottic airwayRespiratory Distress Syndrome Newbornbusiness.industryInfant NewbornObstetrics and GynecologyPulmonary SurfactantsSupraglottic airwayRespiration ArtificialClinical trialLaryngeal MasksMeta-analysisAnesthesiaPediatrics Perinatology and Child Healthsurfactant treatmentbusinessInfant Premature
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