Clinical Trials Logo

Acute Postoperative Pain clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Acute Postoperative Pain.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT02483221 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Postoperative Pain

Postoperative Pain Therapy With Hydromorphone TCI-PCA vs. Morphine PCA

Start date: April 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Treatment of postoperative pain with hydromorphone (a strong analgesic) using patient-controlled analgesia with target-controlled infusion compared to conventional patient-controlled analgesia with morphine after elective cardiac surgery

NCT ID: NCT02137135 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Postoperative Pain

Menstrual Phase and Postoperative Pain

Start date: August 2012
Phase: Phase 0
Study type: Interventional

Fluctuations of female sex hormones during the menstrual cycle influence pain perception. Endogenous pain is pronounced in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. The investigators tested the primary hypothesis that the women having surgery during their follicular phase have more acute pain and require more opioids than those in the luteal phase, and secondarily the investigators tested that women who have surgery during their follicular phase have more incisional pain at 3 month postoperatively.

NCT ID: NCT02115945 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Postoperative Pain

Femoral and Epidural Block After Total Knee Arthroplasty

Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 0
Study type: Interventional

Total knee prosthetic replacement causes severe postoperative pain. Various analgesic techniques have been used in pain control. Comparison of epidural and femoral nerve block is lacking, furthermore effect on chronic pain is unclear. The investigators aimed to compare the effects of epidural and femoral block on acute and chronic postoperative pain.

NCT ID: NCT02107339 Completed - Clinical trials for Patient Satisfaction

Methadone and Hydromorphone For Spinal Surgery

Start date: March 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Patients undergoing major spinal surgery continue to experience moderate-to-severe pain during the first 2-3 days following the operative procedure. Pain complicates the recovery process, despite the routine practice of using potent opioid analgesics. The primary reason that pain is poorly controlled in patients undergoing major surgery is that most commonly-used opioids only produce analgesia for 2-4 hours. The intermittent use of these drugs results in periods of time when a patient will experience discomfort (at which time a nurse administers more drug or the button on a patient-controlled analgesic (PCA) system is pressed to deliver more medication). The use of a long-acting opioid may be advantageous in the perioperative setting. Methadone is an opioid that has a median duration of analgesia of 24-36 hours. Therefore, a single dose administered in the operating room may reduce the need for pain medication and improve pain control for the first few postoperative days. The aim of this randomized clinical trial is to examine the effect of methadone (compared to hydromorphone) on postoperative pain management in patients undergoing major spine surgery

NCT ID: NCT01828424 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Postoperative Pain

Prediction of Postoperative Pain by Measuring Nociception at the End of Surgery

PREPOP
Start date: June 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

There is a large variability of postoperative pain intensity and of the drug doses necessary to alleviate this pain. The investigators hypothesis is that a measurement of nociception at the end of surgery, using either the RIII reflex threshold, measures of heart rate variability or the pupil dilatation reflex measured by pupillometry, in relation to the doses of opioids used intraoperatively will yield a prediction of postoperative pain.