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Pediatrics in the News

Laughing Gas

Getting stitches on the face is no fun for anyone, but it is especially frightening to young children. A study published in the January 2001 issue of Annals of Emergency Medicine evaluated different ways to reduce distress in children needing facial laceration repair. Some of the children received a topical anesthetic alone, some received an anesthetic plus nitrous oxide (laughing gas), some received an anesthetic plus midazolam (an anti-anxiety drug, similar to valium), and some received 'all of the above'. Laughing gas plus a local anesthetic gave the best results -- the lowest distress during cleaning, stitching, and shots, as well as the fewest side effects and the quickest recovery. This was a happy solution for painful or frightening procedures in kids as young as age 2.
Alan Greene MD FAAP
January 15, 2001




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