Publication | Open Access
Acupuncture Compared with 33 Per Cent Nitrous Oxide for Dental Analgesia
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1975
Year
Pain TherapyPain MedicineAcupunctureTooth PulpStimulation DeviceDental AnalgesiaPain ManagementHealth SciencesElectrical StimulationSpinal Cord InjuryPostoperative Pain ManagementPerioperative PainPain ResearchNitrous OxideElectrophysiologyPain MechanismAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiologyComplementary Medicine
Responses to electrical stimulation of the tooth pulp were obtained in both baseline and test sessions for subjects receiving acupuncture, 33 per cent nitrous oxide, or control conditions. A signal-detection analysis across sessions showed that both treatment groups demonstrated reduced sensitivity to stimulation, and increases in bias against reporting strong stimuli as painful. (Key words: Acupuncture; Anesthetics, gases, nitrous oxide; Measurement techniques, sensory decision theory; Pain, sensory decision theory).