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Differences in Speed of Recovery From Anesthesia for Intraoral Surgery

RECRUITINGN/ASponsored by Clinical Hospital Centre Zagreb
Actively Recruiting
PhaseN/A
SponsorClinical Hospital Centre Zagreb
Started2024-04-10
Est. completion2025-11-05
Eligibility
Age18 Years+
Healthy vol.Accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare two groups of patients going in general anesthesia for intraoral surgery, the first group TIVA with propofol and the second group inhalational with sevoflurane. The main questions it aims to answer are to asses speed and quality of recovery from general anesthesia. Participants will fill out a questionnaire to evaluate the quality of recovery from anesthesia using the QoR-40 1h, 24h, and 30 days after waking up from anesthesia in comparison to the results of the same questionnaire before surgery. Also, the investigators will perform a hand grip and bite strength test on the patients after waking up from anesthesia in the operating room, after 1 hour in the recovery room, and after 24 hours compared to preoperative values. The investigators will compare TIVA and Volatile groups to see if there are any differences in recovery seed, muscle strength recovery, postoperative nausea and vomiting, and shivering between groups.

Eligibility

Age: 18 Years+Healthy volunteers accepted
Criteria for patient inclusion are:

* patients older than 18 years
* ASA status 1-2,
* Patients who have an indication for an intraoral surgical procedure longer than 30 minutes.
* Surgical interventions on the soft tissues of the mouth, intraoral excision of tumors, operated through the transoral route
* Patients who agreed to the research and signed the consent

The exclusion criteria are:

* ASA status 3 and higher,
* The need for postoperative care in the ICU,
* Surgery lasting more than 2 hours,
* Surgical procedures that in the operative plan include injuries to the grip of the masticatory muscles, the masticatory muscles themselves, and procedures on the bone, and thus may result in a difference in the strength of the bite. Masticatory muscles are defined as musculus pterygoideus lateralis, musculus pterygoideus medialis, musculus temporalis and musculus masseter.
* Surgical procedures on the bone where the bite force test alone could cause injury
* Patients with diseases of the neuromuscular junction and muscle diseases, myopathy, dystrophy
* Patients taking medications that can cause myopathy or muscle weakness
* Known allergies to drugs used in the trial,
* Refusing to participate

Conditions2

CancerIntraoral Tumor

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