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RECRUITING
NCT07473206
NA

Environmental Visual Distraction With Nitrous Oxide During Outpatient Hysteroscopy: A Randomized Pilot Study

Sponsor: Ospedale degli Infermi di Biella

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This document describes the protocol of a pilot randomized clinical study evaluating the effect of environmental visual distraction combined with nitrous oxide (N₂O) analgesia on the procedural experience of patients undergoing outpatient operative hysteroscopy at the Hysteroscopy Unit of ASL Biella. Office hysteroscopy is widely used for the diagnosis and treatment of intrauterine conditions such as abnormal uterine bleeding, infertility, and endocavitary pathology. Thanks to technological advances and the miniaturization of instruments, many procedures can now be performed in an outpatient setting without general anesthesia. However, pain perception and procedural anxiety may limit patient tolerance and the completion of the examination. Nitrous oxide is commonly used for analgesia in outpatient hysteroscopy due to its rapid onset, reversibility, and favorable safety profile. It allows effective pain control without deep sedation and enables quick patient recovery after the procedure. In addition to pharmacological approaches, environmental strategies aimed at reducing anxiety and discomfort are increasingly studied. In this protocol, a virtual environmental window-a wall-mounted screen displaying relaxing videos such as natural landscapes or marine scenes-is used as a visual distraction tool to potentially improve the patient's procedural experience. The primary objective is to evaluate the effect of the environmental setting on the patient's experience during hysteroscopy, measured using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for pain after the procedure. The secondary outcome is the rate of referral to the operating room following outpatient hysteroscopy. Results will also be stratified by parity and hysteroscopic instrument used. The study will enroll 50 patients aged 25-60 years who are eligible for outpatient hysteroscopy and nitrous oxide analgesia. Participants will be randomized into two groups using sealed envelopes. The intervention group will receive nitrous oxide combined with visual environmental distraction, while the control group will receive nitrous oxide alone according to routine clinical practice. After the procedure, patients will complete the VAS pain scale (0-10) to assess the pain experienced during the intervention. Clinical and procedural data will be collected and analyzed using descriptive and exploratory statistical methods. Outcome assessors will be blinded to group allocation. The study follows international ethical standards, including the Declaration of Helsinki, Good Clinical Practice guidelines, and European data protection regulations (GDPR). Nitrous oxide is part of routine care and is not the experimental component of the study. Overall, this pilot study aims to explore whether a simple non-pharmacological environmental intervention can reduce perceived pain and improve patient tolerance during outpatient hysteroscopy, providing preliminary data for future larger studies.

Official title: Preliminary Evaluation of Environmental Visual Distraction Associated With Nitrous Oxide on Procedural Experience During Outpatient Hysteroscopy: A Randomized Pilot Clinical Study

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

25 Years - 60 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

50

Start Date

2026-03-09

Completion Date

2026-09-01

Last Updated

2026-03-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Environmental Visual Distraction (Virtual Window)

A wall-mounted screen displaying relaxing visual content (e.g., natural landscapes, ocean scenes, or aquarium environments) is activated during outpatient hysteroscopy to provide environmental visual distraction. The visual stimulus begins approximately 5 minutes before the procedure and continues throughout the intervention. This non-pharmacological environmental support is used in addition to standard analgesia with nitrous oxide (N₂O) to potentially reduce perceived pain and improve patient comfort during the procedure.

DRUG

The control group receives nitrous oxide (N₂O) analgesia, which is a drug intervention, even though it is part of routine clinical practice.

Patients receive inhaled nitrous oxide (N₂O) administered through a buccal-nasal mask starting approximately 5 minutes before the outpatient hysteroscopy procedure and continuing throughout the intervention. Nitrous oxide is used as routine analgesia according to standard clinical practice to reduce pain and anxiety during the procedure. No environmental visual distraction or additional experimental intervention is applied in this group.

Locations (1)

Alessandro Messina

Biella, Italy