View clinical trials related to Analgesia.
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This study examine the effect of Parasternal Intercostal Nerve Blocks with local anesthetic on pain control in patients undergoing non-emergent cardiac surgery in a prospective controlled trial. Half of participants will receive General Anesthesia combined to parasternal block while the other half receive only General Anesthesia.
This study analyze the effect of Pericapsular Nerve Group (PENG) Block combined to wound infiltration for analgesia after elective hip replacement. Half of participants will receive a PENG Block combined with wound infiltration, while the other half will receive wound infiltration alone.
Hepatectomy induces moderate to severe postoperative pain. Patient-controlled intravenous analgesia has been used in many medical centers for post-hepatectomy analgesia, but the effects are limited and often cause undesirable adverse effects. Regional Block has been used for postoperative analgesia in many surgeries. Some studies suggest that regional analgesia has an opioid-sparing effect and can reduce the incidence of chronic pain. Also, the programmed intermittent bolus infusion is better than continuous infusion, with less analgesic consumption and fewer adverse effects. Studies on the early and late postoperative analgesia and recovery effects of paravertebral block for open hepatectomy are scarce. Therefore, the investigators aim to conduct a prospective, randomized, subject and assessor-blinded, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study to test the hypothesis that the programmed intermittent bolus infusion of right thoracic paravertebral block reduces postoperative intravenous analgesic use and pain scores and improved patients' satisfaction.
Spinal anesthesia (SA) is a widely accepted anesthetic technique for hip fracture repair among elderly. Positioning for SA can be extremely painful. Effective management of pain is important for these patients comfort. Fascia Iliaca block (FIB) and Femoral nerve blocks are commonly used for analgesia in hip fracture patients. However, they often provide a modest reduction in pain. The Percapsular Nerve Group block (PENG Block) has the advantage that it covers the accessory obturator nerve. Aim of the study: compare FIB with PENG prior to positioning hip fracture patients for standardized SA. In a prospective randomized double blind we included 80 patients aged more than 65 years old, for whom pain was felt when raising the affected limb to 15 degrees. Patients were assigned to receive either ultrasound guided Fascia Iliaca block or Percapsular Nerve Group block using 20 mL Lidocaine 1.5% in both groups. We compared pain on positioning for spinal anesthesia using Verbal Rating Scale (VRS 0 = no pain , VRS 1 = mild pain, t 2= severe pain) for both groups. We also recorded different times to perfom block.
Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is widely employed nowadays. Multimodal analgesia approach is implemented within the enhanced recovery protocol in our facility to improve participants' recovery. Due to side effects of narcotics, the may adversely affect the quality of recovery, the investigators intended to test the efficacy of opioids free anaesthesia on the quality of recovery and postoperative narcotic use.
The purpose of this randomized, controlled prospective study is to compare the analgesic effect of US-guided ESP block versus PECs block in patients undergoing breast surgery for breast cancer in the National Cancer Institute, Cairo University. We aim to evaluate the postoperative pain intensity and opioid consumption within 24 hours
Background: The surgeries with upper abdominal wall incisions cause a severe pain and providing an adequate analgesia is an important challenge for the anesthesiologist. The serratus intercostal plane block (SIPB) has been already described as analgesic technique in open cholecystectomy. The aim of this study is to evaluate its analgesic efficacy in pain control, opioids consumption and recovery quality in upper abdominal surgeries. Methods: This blind, randomized controlled study was conducted on 102 patients undergoing open upper abdominal wall surgery under general anesthesia. All patients who received serratus intercostal plane block at the eighth rib as analgesic technique were included in group 0 (SIPB) and in Group 1 (control) those who received continuous intravenous morphine analgesia. In each group was evaluated pain scores in numeric verbal scale (NVS) and opioids consumption at 0,6,12,24 y 48h postoperative time. The quality of the postoperative recovery was evaluated with the modified Postoperative Quality of Recovery Score ( QoR-15 questionnaire) at 24h.
the study aim is to compare the analgesic effect of thoracic epidural versus serratus plane block versus erector spinae block in thoracic surgeries
This study proposes to pilot test an intervention to facilitate opioid pain reliever (OPR) tapering in primary care. The intervention will incorporate a clinician embedded within primary care to follow tapering dose schedules to support providers as well to deliver a psychosocial curriculum to support and engage patients. In a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT), the study will examine the preliminary efficacy and feasibility of the manualized, protocol-based tapering intervention ("TapPro") compared to usual care. As there is no standard definition or outcome for tapering, the primary efficacy outcome is a decrease in OPR dose over six months. Separately, the study proposes a clinically meaningful dose reduction (greater than or equal to 30 percent) as a secondary outcome. The central hypotheses' are that a tapering intervention with patient and provider support is feasible in a primary care setting and can result in greater dose reduction when compared to usual care.