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. 2018 Dec 7;115(49):815–821. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2018.0815

eTable 2. Effect of perioperative or postoperative aromatherapy on anxiety, stress, pain, nausea, vomiting, and sleep quality.

Reference *1 Year Intervention N Patients Surgery Type/quality Results
Symptom: Anxiety and stress
(e24) 2011 Preoperative inhalation of lavender oil or water 72 Adults Cardiac and general surgery Quasi-experimental study,
quality*2:
bad
STAI (intervention vs. placebo): −12.4 vs. −2.4 pts (p <0.01)
(e33) 2012 Postoperative massage with mandarin oil (A),
carrier oil (B), or no intervention (C)
60 Children up to
3 years
Craniofacial
surgery
RCT,
quality*2: bad
COMFORT-B (groups A / B / C):11.1 / 11.6 / 12.1 pts; NAS (stress): 2 / 4 / 3 pts; NAS (pain): 1 / 0 / 1 pt (p not given)
(e58) 2013 Aroma diffuser with bergamot oil or placebo 109 Adults Ambulatory
surgery
RCT,
quality*2: good
STAI (intervention vs. placebo): −3 vs. −2 pts (p = 0.02)
(e65) 2014 Inhalation on the 2nd and 3rd postoperative days of lavender oil versus water  60 Adults Cardiac surgery RCT,
quality*2: good
STAI (intervention vs. placebo):
before intervention : 48.73 vs. 48 pts; after intervention 42.6 vs. 42.73 pts,
on 3rd postoperative day: 41.33 vs. 41.56 pts
(p not significant at any point)
(e72) 2017 Preoperative inhalation of lavender essential oil
versus no intervention
100 Adults Ambulatory
ENT surgery
Controlled study,
quality*2: bad
Anxiety reduction according to VAS (intervention vs. control): −1.07 vs. −0.01
(p <0.01)
(e69) 2017 Aromatherapy during biopsy with lavender-sandalwood (A),
orange-peppermint (B), or placebo (C)
 87 Women Breast biopsy RCT, quality*2: bad STAI: group A, from 48 to 37 pts; group B, from 43 to 37 pts; group C, from 43 to 39 pts; difference A vs. C,
p = 0.03
(e13) 2018 Preoperative massage with lavender oil or no
intervention
 80 Adults Colorectal surgery RCT, quality*2: bad STAI (intervention vs. control): 35.25 vs. 45.40 pts on morning of surgery
(p <0.01)
Symptom: Pain
(e39) 2016 Postoperative inhalation of lavender oil or
oxygen
 50 Women Breast biopsy RCT, quality*2: bad NAS (Intervention vs. control): 5 min after arrival on ward 0.2 vs. 1.26 pts,
after 30 min 0.6 vs. 1.1 pts, after 60 min 0.6 vs. 1.42 pts;
emergency medication required: 1 vs. 6;
excellent satisfaction with pain control: 92% vs. 52% (p <0.05)
(e38) 2006 Postoperative inhalation of lavender oil or baby oil  54 Adults Bariatric surgery RCT, quality*2: bad Need for anesthesia (intervention vs. control): 42% vs. 82% (p <0.01); use of anesthesia (intervention vs. control): 2.38 mg vs. 4.26 mg morphine (p = 0.04)
(e27) 2011 Perioperative inhalation of lavender oil or neutral oil 200 Women Cesarean RCT, quality*2: bad VAS (intervention vs. control): baseline 6.16 vs. 5.78, after 30 min 3.67 vs. 5.29 (p <0.01), after 8 h 2.01 vs. 4.64 (p <0.01), after 16 h 0.67 vs. 4.05 (p <0.01)
(e67) 2013 Postoperative inhalation of lavender oil or no intervention  48 Children
(6–12 years)
Tonsillectomy RCT, quality*2: bad Number of oral paracetamol doses (intervention vs. control): 1st day, 2.1 vs. 2.6 (p <0.05), 2nd day: 2.1 vs. 3.4 (p <0.01), 3rd day: 1.3 vs. 2.4 (p <0.01) vas: 1st day, 7.0 vs. 7.6 pts, 2nd day: 6.8 vs. 7.0 pts, 3rd day 3.9 vs. 5.9 pts (p not given)
(e63) 2014 Postoperative inhalation of lavender oil  40 Adults Cardiac surgery Single-arm study, quality*2: bad; no control group NAS reduction: from 5.6 to 5.0 pts after lavender inhalation (p not significant)
(e7) 2014 Massage of different body regions with
eucalyptus-lemon oil (A), neutral oil (B), or no intervention (C)
 60 Adults Vitrectomy RCT,
quality*2: good
FPS, day 1 (for groups A / B / C): shoulder: −1.1 / −0.8 / +0.15 pts; neck: −0.85 / −0.8 / +0.15 pts; back: −0.75 / −0.6 / +0.3 pts; waist: −0.9 / −1 / +0.1 pts; arms: −0.85 / −0.05 / −0.05 pts (p not given); pain reduction also observed on days 2 and 3 (data not shown)
(e11) 2015 Inhalation on 2nd postoperative day of lavender oil or oxygen  50 Adults Cardiac surgery RCT,
quality*2: bad
VAS (intervention / placebo): baseline, 5.62 / 6.27 pts; after 5 min, 4.26 / 6.23 pts (p <0.01); after 30 min, 4.39 / 6.3 pts (p <0.01); after 60 min, 4.11 / 6.35 pts (p <0.01)
(e53) 2015 Postoperative inhalation of rose oil or almond oil  64 Children
(3–6 years)
Mixed RCT,
quality*2: bad
TPPPS (intervention / placebo) directly at arrival on ward: 3.8 vs. 3.1 pts, after 3 h: 1.0 / 2.6 pts, after 6 h: 1.03 vs. 2.03 pts, after 9 h: 0.9 / 1.6 pts, after 12 h 0.4 / 1.1 pts (p <0.01 for all time points)
Symptom: Nausea and vomiting
(e9) 2004 Inhalation (upon request) of peppermint, propanol, or NaCl  33 Adults Ambulatory
surgery
RCT,
quality*2: bad
VAS (for all therapies): −1.79 pts (p <0.05), but not difference between the groups
(e31) 2011 Inhalation (upon request; using an aroma pad) of mix of ginger, spearmint, peppermint and cardamom (A) vs. ginger alone vs. isopropyl alcohol vs. NaCl 303 Adults Gynecologic abdominal
surgery
RCT,
quality*2: bad
Ginger (OR = 1.86 [95% CI: (1.22; 3.0), p <0.01]) or mix (or = 2.7 [95%-ci: (1.78; 4.56), p <0.01]) better than nacl or alcohol (95% ci: [1.08; 2.13], p = 0.02; 95% ci: [1.5; 3.17], p <0.01) for nausea and need for antiemetics (95% ci: [−43.1; −8], p = 0.02; 95% ci: [−57.8; −22.7], p <0.01)
(e25) 2012 Inhalation (upon request) of peppermint oil or NaCl, or treatment with Zofran  71 Women Mixed RCT,
quality*2: bad
VAS (1–20, peppermint / NaCl / Zofran): before intervention: 12.5 / 11.9 / 11.3 pts; after 5 min: 8.0 / 7.5 / 6.8 pts; after 10 min: 2.4 / 3.4 / 5.8 pts (p not significant at any time point)
(e42) 2012 Inhalation of peppermint oil or placebo, or treatment with standard antiemetics  35*3 Women Cesarean RCT,
quality*2: bad
Reduction of nausea and vomiting for 17 out of 19 patients at 2 min and 5 min after peppermint treatment; no improvement after placebo or anti‧emetics (at either 2 min or 5 min)
(e1) 2018 Perioperative inhalation of different aromatic oils (including peppermint) or placebo 402 Mixed Mixed Systematic
review, quality*2: high
General aromatherapy vs. placebo: SMD = −0.22 (95% CI: [−0.63; 0.18], p = 0.28; reduced need of antiemetic treatment after aromatherapy: RR = 0.60 (95% CI: [0.37; 0.97], p =0.04; peppermint inhalation vs. placebo: SMD = −0.18 (95% CI: [−0.86; 0.49], p = 0.59
(e30) 2014 Inhalation for nausea (upon request) of spearmint, peppermint, lavender, and ginger vs. placebo 339 Adults Mixed RCT,
quality*2: bad
Nausea for 121 Patienten, of whom 94 were randomized (54 intervention, 40 placebo); NAS (intervention / placebo): initial 5.4 / 5.6 pts, after use 3.4 / 4.4 pts (p = 0.03)
(e8) 2015 Postoperative inhalation (2 drops every 30 min, aroma pad) of ginger extract or NaCl 120 Adults Nephrectomy RCT,
quality*4: bad
VAS (intervention / placebo): 7.1 / 7.4 pts after 30 min, 4.2 / 7.4 pts after 60 min, 2.4 / 7.4 pts after 90 min, 2.0 / 7.4 after 120 min, 1.1 / 6.5 after 6 h (for all, p <0.01); need for ondansetron: 1.9 / 3.9 mg (p <0.01)
(e54) 2015 Inhalation (upon request) of spearmint, peppermint, lavender, and ginger  70 Adults Ambulatory
surgery
Exploratory study,
quality*4: bad; no control group
Nausea reported for 25 patients; NAS (after use), −4.78 pts (p not given)
(e47) 2017 Postoperative inhalation of ginger oil or NaCl  60 Adults Abdominal
surgery
Quasi-experimental study, quality*4: bad RINVR (intervention / placebo): 11.8 / 11.57 pts (baseline), 1.6 / 10.47 pts after 6 h, 1.0 / 9.07 pts after 12 h, 0.83 / 7.2 pts after 24 h; lower pts after intervention (p <0.01)
(e37) 2016 Inhalation for nausea of lavender, menthol, ginger, or NaCl  80 Children
(4–16 years)
Ambulatory surgery RCT,
quality*2: good
BARF (intervention / placebo): reduction by 2 pts, 90% / 78%; use of antiemetic therapy, 52% / 44%; vomiting, 9% / 11% (p not significant in any case)
Improvement of sleep quality
(e36) 2017 Postoperative massage with lavender oil or no intervention  60 Adults General surgery Experimental study,
quality*4: bad
RCSF: increase of 25.72 pts (p <0.01) (as compared to control)
(e13) 2018 Preoperative massage with lavender oil or no intervention  80 Adults Colorectal surgery Experimental study,
quality*4: bad
RCSF: increase of 24.02 pts (p <0.01) (as compared to control)

*1 See eReferences; *2 Calculated according to the Jadad score scale; *3 Unbalanced group sizes: of the 35 patients, 22 were in the intervention group, 8 in the placebo group, and 5 in the standard therapy group; *4 Calculated according to the AMSTAR score scale BARF, Baxter Animated Retching Faces scale; CI, confidence interval; COMFORT-B, comfort behavior scale (pain, sedation) for young children; FPS, Faces Pain Scale; N, sample size; NaCl, sodium chloride saline solution; NAS, numeric analog scale (110);

OR, odds ratio; pts, points; RCSF, Richard Campbell sleep questionnaire; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RINVR, Rhodes Index of Nausea, Vomiting, and Retching; RR, relative risk; SMD, standardized mean difference;

STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; TPPPS, Toddler-Preschooler Postoperative Pain Scale; VAS, Visual Analog Scale (110)