Title of article :
Antiemetic effect of ondansetron versus metoclopramide in nauseous isolated head trauma patients: a double-blind randomized clinical trial
Author/Authors :
Alimohammadi ، Hossein Department of Emergency Medicine - Imam Hossein Hospital - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences , Partovinezhad ، Hossein Department of Emergency Medicine - Ayatollah Mousavi Hospital - Zanjan University of Medical Sciences , Aliniagerdroudbari ، Ehsan School of Medicine - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences , Babaniamansour ، Sepideh School of Medicine - Islamic Azad University, Tehran Medical Sciences branch , Partovinezhad ، Effat Department of Emergency Medicine - Ayatollah Mousavi Hospital - Zanjan University of Medical Sciences , Shojaee ، Majid Department of Emergency Medicine - Imam Hossein Hospital - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences
From page :
1
To page :
7
Abstract :
Objective: As nausea is one of the most common annoying symptoms in isolated head trauma (IHT) and needs timely management to prevent further adverse outcomes, this study was performed to compare ondansetron and metoclopramide as therapeutic agents in nauseous IHT. Methods: This study was a double-blind clinical trial. Participants were patients visiting the ED with the chief complaint of nauseous IHT event. Group A received 10mg/2ml of metoclopramide and group B 4mg/2ml of ondansetron through slow intravenous (IV) injection. The primary outcome was the severity of nausea 20 minutes after the intervention based on the visual analogue scale (VAS) score. Results: A total of 130 patients participated in the study (65 in each group). The mean age was 30.5±20.5 years, and 73.1% of the participantswere male. The decrease in the mean nausea severity scores was statistically significant in both group A (78.3±9.7 before vs. 29.8±16.8mmafter the intervention; P 0.001) and group B (78.5±11.1 vs. 27.8±13.9 mm; P 0.001). There was no significant difference between the mean nausea severity scores of groups A and B before the intervention (P = 0.93) or after it (P = 0.65). The decrease in the severity score of nausea was 48.5mmin group A and 50.6mmin group B, with no significant difference between the two groups (P = 0.63). Conclusion: Both Ondansetron and metoclopramide significantly reduced the severity of nausea in patients with mild IHT visiting ED but no treatment armwas superior. Both drugs showed good safety profiles.
Keywords :
Clinical Trial , Head Trauma , Metoclopramide , Nausea , Ondansetron
Journal title :
Frontiers in Emergency Medicine
Journal title :
Frontiers in Emergency Medicine
Record number :
2739523
Link To Document :
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