View clinical trials related to Chronic Pain.
Filter by:Characterize the relative abuse liability of a short versus a long acting opioid in chronic pain patients.
Fibromyalgics frequently report sleep disturbances, in particular poor and unrefreshing sleep. Additionally, studies have reported that sleep problems, pain and mood disturbances are associated in patients with fibromyalgia. By improving the quality of sleep, complaints of poor and unrefreshing sleep, fatigue, pain, which are among the main components of this chronic pain disorder may be improved.
This pilot study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of the buprenorphine transdermal system versus placebo on health outcomes in elderly residents in supervised living environments. The treatment intervention duration is 42 days during which time supplemental analgesic medication (usual analgesic care) will be provided to all subjects in addition to study drug.
Primary objectives: - To determine non-inferiority of FITpatch with regard to efficacy compared to standard opioid treatment - To assess the safety of FITpatch compared to standard opioid treatment Secondary objectives: - To assess the intake of oral morphine as rescue analgesic to FITpatch compared to standard opioid treatment - To assess Quality of life reported with FITpatch compared to standard opioid treatment
The purpose of this study is to determine the extent to which analgesic tolerance develops in chronic pain patients who are either started on opioids or who receive an increase in pre-study opioid dose level and then observed during long-term (20 weeks) stable opioid therapy. In addition to clinical measures of relief of ongoing chronic pain, estimation of tolerance development will be supplemented by periodic assessment of the anti-nociceptive effects of opioids using the brief thermal sensitization model.
The objective of this study is to assess the safety of treatment with Duragesic® (a transdermal patch delivering the narcotic pain-reliever fentanyl) in doses of 12.5, 25, 50, 75 and 100 micrograms/hour in pediatric subjects requiring narcotic pain relief therapy. Particular attention is paid to appropriate dose conversion to Duragesic® therapy from the subject's current narcotic pain relief therapy, and to the parameters for increasing the Duragesic® dose to achieve analgesic effectiveness. Pharmacokinetics (fentanyl levels in the bloodstream during treatment) will also be assessed.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness and safety of Durogesic® (a transdermal patch delivering the narcotic pain-reliever fentanyl) in the treatment of children with chronic pain requiring long-term narcotic pain relief therapy.
The objective of this study is to assess the safety and clinical utility of Duragesic® 12.5 micrograms/hour (a transdermal patch delivering the narcotic pain-reliever fentanyl) in the treatment of children ages 2 to 12 with continuous pain requiring narcotic pain relief therapy. Pharmacokinetics (fentanyl levels in the bloodstream during treatment) will also be assessed.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a telephone-based self-monitoring and skills review program with personalized therapist feedback following group CST for chronic pain can reduce and prevent relapse of the pain, physical disability, and psychological distress experienced by patients with chronic pain of the muscles and bone.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the analgesic efficacy and safety of oxymorphone extended release in opioid-experienced patients with chronic low back pain.