Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04243967

Music Therapy Pathway in Patients Undergoing Total Laparoscopic Hysterectomy

Music Therapy Pathway to Reduce Preoperative Anxiety in Patients Undergoing Total Laparoscopic Hysterectomy for Benign Disease: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
Università degli Studi dell'Insubria · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
45 Years – 55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Music therapy is a non-invasive, safe, and inexpensive intervention that can be easily and successfully delivered. it has been shown that music therapy might reduce the postoperative pain in patients undergoing cesarean section and in those with cancer, showing a lower state of anxiety and greater pain reduction in participants who received music interventions. The aim of the present study is to investigate the role of music and music therapy on anxiety and perception of pain in patients undergoing elective hysterectomy for benign disease.

Detailed description

Hysterectomy is the second most common surgical procedure in the United States. Uterine fibroids (with or without the association of heavy menstrual bleeding) represent the primary indication for surgery. Prospective controlled trials have shown that the laparoscopic approach guarantees benefits in terms of perioperative surgical outcomes and better patients' quality of life if compared with open surgery. Music is a non-invasive, safe, and inexpensive intervention that can be delivered easily and successfully. Results of a recent meta-analysis of 73 RCTs demonstrated that music could be offered as a way to help patients reducing pain and anxiety during the postoperative period. Recently a prospective randomized trial demonstrated a reduction of anxiety also in patients undergoing gynecological minor procedures (office hysteroscopy). Thanks to the use of a validated scale for assessing the preoperative and postoperative level of anxiety (STAI: State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), an Italian group demonstrated an average reduction of approximately 5 points of STAI score in patients enrolled for listening to music before surgery compared to the control group (without music). Similarly, a RCT demonstrated that preoperative music intervention might also reduce the postoperative pain in patients undergoing cesarean section (reduction of 1.35 VAS points at 6 hours). A recent meta-analysis evaluated music interventions for improving psychological and physical outcomes in adult and pediatric patients with cancer, showing a lower state of anxiety and greater pain reduction in participants who received music interventions. No study has been performed that aimed to investigate the role of music on anxiety and perception of pain in patients undergoing elective hysterectomy for benign disease, up to now. A comparison with a superiority trial is required to evaluate the effects of music played preoperatively in women undergoing total laparoscopic hysterectomy for benign disease. Our findings will offer evidence in favor of the use of music therapy as a method to reduce perioperative anxiety and postoperative pain.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMusic therapyOn the surgery day, the patient is accompanied by music-therapist all the way from her room to the operating theatre in order to monitor and adapt music-therapy intervention. The patient, prior to the anesthetic, take faces 3 phases of music therapy intervention (1 hour): * 1° Phase Active Music therapy: the patient takes part in a session of live improvisational music therapy, with the therapist, to elaborate pre-operative stress. * 2° Phase Relaxation with Receptive Live Music: music therapist play live to relax patients with autogenic training and tunnings breathing. * 3° Phase playlist listening based on the patient's needs. Patients listen to music with an mp3 player with earphones within the ear canal (H\&H CE mp3/Usb; Headphones on Air in-ear with volume control) with a maximum volume of 60 dB (previously set with a sound level meter).
OTHERControlStandard perioperative management including perioperative care (without the use of music / music therapy)

Timeline

Start date
2020-02-01
Primary completion
2020-07-31
Completion
2020-08-31
First posted
2020-01-28
Last updated
2021-01-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04243967. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.