Anxiety Clinical Trial
Official title:
Music Therapy in the Treatment of Perioperative Anxiety and Pain-A Randomized, Prospective, Clinical Trial
Verified date | April 2024 |
Source | University of Pittsburgh |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
A large number of adults who undergo surgery experience perioperative anxiety and pain. The current recommended approach to perioperative pain management is a multimodal approach including opioids. Evidence has demonstrated that the pharmacological management of pain and anxiety is often associated with side effects which limits patient satisfaction and their ability to be discharged from the hospital. Furthermore, it is established that perioperative level of pain is directly correlated to anxiety, depression, and catastrophizing and these are significant predictors for the level of postoperative pain, as well as at the hospital length of stay. Therefore, considerations have been given to the use of non-pharmaceutical complementary approaches to management of anxiety including pre and postoperative use of music. The benefits of music therapy on anxiety has been reported using several surgical models and conditions in adults (cancer, hysterectomy in cancer) and children, prior to surgery and after. The objective of this study is to investigate the effects of music interventions on anxiety and pain in adult populations undergoing diverse types of minor surgery indicate that music therapy significantly reduces both post operative anxiety and pain in adults receiving music interventions before, during, or after surgery.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 80 |
Est. completion date | August 21, 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | August 21, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Adults ages 18-70, meeting the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status I, II, or III - Admitted for a scheduled same-day surgery under general anesthesia with a single nerve block, including ambulatory breast surgery, laparoscopic cholecystectomy or laparoscopic hernia repair surgery Exclusion Criteria: - Music other than the intervention planned in the operating room - ASA status IV - Planned spinal anesthesia - Major psychosocial disorders - Persistent opioid use - History of drug abuse or alcoholism - Baseline PROMIS Anxiety score of less than 19 or greater than 35 - Subject is already receiving an alternative intervention for anxiety or pain (i.e aromatherapy, hypnosis, etc) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | UPMC Shadyside Hospital | Pittsburgh | Pennsylvania |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Pittsburgh | Shadyside Hospital Foundation |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Efficacy of music therapy on reducing post-operative opioid requirement | The primary endpoint will be to observe the change in opioid requirement in patients undergoing surgery using the current multimodal Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocol. This is reported in the consumption of oral morphine mg equivalents (OME). | Day of surgery up to 5 days post-operative | |
Secondary | Pre-operative emotional distress related to anxiety | Pre-operative emotional distress related to anxiety will be measured by assessment of participant's answers to the PROMIS Emotional Distress -Anxiety- Short Form 8a questionnaire prior to surgery. There are 8 questions about how the participants may have felt in the past 7 days. The scale for each question is from 1, never felt this way in the past 7 days, to 5, always have felt this way in the past 7 days. The overall questionnaire scores can range from 8 (least severe score) to 40 (most severe score). Higher scores present a worse outcome. | Baseline, pre-surgery | |
Secondary | Post-operative change in emotional distress related to anxiety | Post-operative emotional distress related to anxiety will be measured by assessment of participant's answers to the PROMIS Emotional Distress -Anxiety- Short Form 8a questionnaire.There are 8 questions about how the participants may have felt in the past 7 days. The scale for each question is from 1, never felt this way in the past 7 days, to 5, always have felt this way in the past 7 days. The overall questionnaire scores can range from 8 (least severe score) to 40 (most severe score). Higher scores present a worse outcome. | Day 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 post-operative | |
Secondary | Pre-operative emotional distress related to depression | Pre-operative emotional distress related to depression will be measured by assessment of participant's answers to the PROMIS Emotional Distress-Depression-Short Form questionnaire prior to surgery. There are 8 questions about how the participant may have felt in the past 7 days. The scale for each question is from 1, never felt this way in the past 7 days, to 5, always have felt this way in the past 7 days. The overall questionnaire scores can range from 8 (least severe score) to 40 (most severe score). Higher scores present a worse outcome. | Baseline, pre-surgery | |
Secondary | Post-operative change in emotional distress related to depression | Pre-operative emotional distress related to depression will be measured by assessment of participant's answers to the PROMIS Emotional Distress-Depression-Short Form questionnaire prior to surgery. There are 8 questions about how the participant may have felt in the past 7 days. The scale for each question is from 1, never felt this way in the past 7 days, to 5, always have felt this way in the past 7 days. The overall questionnaire scores can range from 8 (least severe score) to 40 (most severe score). Higher scores present a worse outcome. | Day 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 post-operative | |
Secondary | Pre-operative pain rating using the Pain Catastrophizing Scale | Pre-operative pain ratings will be measured by the assessment of the participant's answers to the Pain Catastrophizing Scale questionnaire. There are 14 statements related to pain that participants will record experiencing on a scale of 0 being experienced not at all to 4 being experienced all of the time. The lowest possible score is 0 and the highest possible score is 56. Higher scores present a worse outcome | Baseline, pre-surgery | |
Secondary | Post-operative pain rating using the Pain Catastrophizing Scale | Pre-operative pain ratings will be measured by the assessment of the participant's answers to the Pain Catastrophizing Scale questionnaire. There are 14 statements related to pain that participants will record experiencing on a scale of 0 being experienced not at all to 4 being experienced all of the time. The lowest possible score is 0 and the highest possible score is 56. Higher scores present a worse outcome. | Day 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 post-operative | |
Secondary | Length of hospital stay | Evaluate time to hospital discharge from out of OR time in minutes | Day of surgery up to 5 days post-operative | |
Secondary | Incidence of post-operative nausea and vomiting (PONV) | Evaluate the number of post-operative nausea and vomiting episodes following surgery. | Day of surgery through 5 days post-operative | |
Secondary | Post-operative patient satisfaction | Participants are asked to assess their overall satisfaction with care upon discharge on a 10-point satisfaction scale of 0 (least satisfaction) to 10 (highest satisfaction). The lowest possible score is 0 and the highest possible score is 10. Higher scores represent a better outcome. | Day 5 post-operative | |
Secondary | Change in post-operative pain using a numerical rating scale | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) Pain scores on a scale from 0-10, with 0 being no pain, 5 being moderate pain and 10 being the worst imaginable pain. The lowest possible score is 0 and the highest possible score is 10. higher scores represent a worse outcome. | Day of surgery up to 5 days post-operative |
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