At a glance
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Musical Grammatological and Neurocognitive Parameterization of Analgesic and Anxiolytic Effects of Culturally and Personally Contextualized Music Listening During Painful Dental Procedures
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Baseline Assessment (T0), Control Condition - Silence (Pre-Music Phase), and 2 other interventions for Dental Pain and Dental Anxiety. Completed, enrolled 30 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The goal of this clinical study is to determine whether listening to culturally and personally contextualized music can reduce pain and anxiety in adults undergoing dental procedures. It will also examine how this intervention affects physiological responses related to stress. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does listening to a preselected, patient-chosen musical sequence reduce perceived pain during a dental procedure? * Does the music modulate physiological stress responses, such as heart rate and blood pressure? * Do the analgesic and anxiolytic effects vary depending on the patient's cultural musical preferences (e.g., Mashriq vs. Western music)? How do patients perceive the effectiveness of the music, and how does this relate to physiological and self-reported measures? Researchers will compare periods with and without music during the same dental procedure to evaluate the effect of the musical intervention. Participants will: * Choose a musical sequence from a predefined selection based on relaxing musical characteristics * Undergo a dental treatment involving drilling for caries * Experience alternating phases with and without music during the procedure * Have their heart rate, blood pressure, and pain levels measured at different stages * Complete questionnaires assessing anxiety before the procedure and their experience after the treatment The study includes 30 adult participants and is conducted in a private dental clinic.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Measurement of baseline physiological parameters (heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure) prior to the dental procedure, without any auditory stimulation or dental drilling.
Participants undergo dental drilling for 30 seconds without music. Physiological parameters (heart rate, blood pressure) and perceived pain intensity are recorded to establish control measures prior to the music intervention.
Participants listen to a self-selected musical sequence from a predefined, culturally and personally contextualized playlist starting 2 minutes before and continuing during a 30-second dental drilling period. Physiological parameters (heart rate and blood pressure) and perceived pain intensity are recorded to assess the effects of the music intervention on pain and stress responses.
Participants undergo a second 30-second dental drilling period without music following the intervention phase. Physiological parameters and perceived pain intensity are recorded to evaluate post-intervention effects and return to baseline conditions.