View clinical trials related to Acute Pain.
Filter by:Renal colics are a common cause af acute intense pain in medical emergency settings requiring often the use of high level antalgics (opioid) to relief the patient. In the other hand, Acupuncture is well known widely for its therapeutic characteristics, especially in relieving pain. the aim of these study is to compare this two pain relieving techniques in patients consulting the emergency departement (ED) for acute onset renal colics.
Intense acute pain is a common reason for Emergency admittance and its management is one of the major public health goals. In the recommendations formalized experts, it is recommended to use a protocol titration with morphine bolus of 2 mg (for patients less than 60 kg) or 3 mg (for patients over 60 kg) repeated every 5 minutes with a target of the Visual Analog Scale less than or equal to 30. Despite these specific recommendations and a broad awareness of the teams, management of pain remains to be improved, the major difficulty of morphine titration at the emergency department being the availability of paramedical personnel to perform revaluations and reinjection. Thus, effective analgesia would be obtained in 50% of cases to 30 minutes. The investigators want to study the self-controlled morphine titration by the patient by a mechanical device for single use (efficacy/safety).
This study will explore effectiveness of three doses of fentanyl sublingual spray against an active comparator in emergency department (ED) patients with acute pain. After screening, eligible participants will participate in a treatment period (up to 2 hours) and a post-treatment evaluation period (up to 4 hours or discharge from the ED). Open-label standard of care rescue medication for pain can be given at any time during the study period, based on clinical judgment of the treating physician. Adverse events will be collected for five days after initial enrollment.
Viedo-assisted thoracoscopic surgery(VATS) have became popular in recent years. There is no golden rule of postoperative analgesia for VATS. Compared with lobectomy, wedge resection preserves better pulmonary function and is suitable for elder patients and patients who could not afford to have lobectomy. In addition to surgery time、recovery time and hospital stay, wound incisions and organization damages are different,too. Will patients also have different response to pain control after these two surgery? The retrospective study is to compared the differences of postoperative pain management between VATS lobectomy and wedge resection.
The purpose of this project is to test an innovative method for managing pain in acutely ill hospitalized patients who are not able to report their pain verbally to health care professionals. Nurses will use a Pain Assessment and Intervention for the Non-communicative (PAIN) Algorithm to guide assessment of pain, selection of pain medications, and management of medication side effects. The researchers will evaluate whether patients who are managed with the PAIN Algorithm have less severe pain and increased use of pharmacologic pain management strategies than those who are not managed with the PAIN Algorithm. The study design is a non-randomized quasi-experimental cohort design with two cohorts who will be sequentially studied. In phase 1, patients will comprise the usual care group (UCG), or control cohort, defined as receiving pain assessment and management practices that nurses are currently performing on the study units. In phase 2 the PAIN Algorithm coupled with analgesic order sets will be introduced to nurses and physicians on all participating units as the intervention. Patients enrolled in this phase will be considered the intervention group (IG), also called the experimental cohort. Nurses will be enrolled from the participating inpatient units to provide data on the clinical utility of the PAIN Algorithm
Findings from the investigator's lab and others' show the involvement of the brain's mesolimbic circuitry in pain perception and evaluation, as well as during the transition from acute to chronic pain states in both humans and animals. Dopamine (DA) is one of the main neurotransmitters in this circuitry, and it is possible it could have an intimate role in pain processing, chronicity, and related anatomical and functional neuroplasticity. In this study, the investigators first need to know if the combination of l-dopa and Naproxen is safe and efficacious in humans with acute pain, and if so, at what doses. For the present study, healthy pain-free participants will be injected with a small bolus of capsaicin subcutaneously to induce acute cutaneous inflammatory pain. Capsaicin is ideal for this study because it causes a characteristic inflammatory response that is almost always accompanied with pain, has a well-validated dose-response curve, and has effects that will go away completely in a few hours after administration, causing no permanent damage to study subjects. Effects of capsaicin will be measured by changes (decreases) from baseline in thermal and tactile thresholds, as well as by verbally reported cutaneous pain levels (on a scale from 0-10). Participants will also be given study medication in the form of a placebo, one drug, or a combination of drugs before capsaicin injection to allow for any analgesic effects to peak before pain onset. For those receiving active medication, they will either receive Naproxen with placebo or the combination of naproxen and l-dopa (the latter of which will be in one of two different doses). This will allow the investigators to investigate (1) whether co-administration of naproxen and l-dopa has analgesic effects in low levels of acute pain in humans, (2) if this combination is pain-alleviating, whether it is equally as or more efficacious than naproxen, which is the clinical standard of treatment, and finally (3) what dose provides the most analgesia.
For more than 25 years, Regional Anesthesia has challenged anesthesiologists to determine whether it offers real benefits in terms of patient outcome from major surgery, compared with general anesthesia. Although it is clear that regional analgesia in association with general anesthesia substantially reduces postoperative pain, the benefits in terms of overall perioperative outcome are controversial. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect on short and long-term postoperative outcomes of adding regional analgesia to general anaesthesia in thoridetomic patients.
ًًًُُُُThe investigators are testing the efficacy of a new novel technique; serratus anterior plane block, for preventing postoperative pain after breast surgery for cancer. This block will be compared with the well-established paravertebral block.
The primary objective is to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of IV TRV130 compared with placebo in patients with acute postoperative pain after bunionectomy.
This is a randomized, double blind, placebo controlled, parallel group study to assess the efficacy and safety of K-103-IP compared with placebo patch for treatment of mild to moderate acute pain associated with ankle strain or sprain.