View clinical trials related to Chronic Pain.
Filter by:Sleep impairments reliably predict worsened chronic pain and correlate with visual analogue pain scores. Therapies targeted at improving sleep, including cognitive behavioral therapy, improve both sleep quality and also pain management, and reduce interference of pain with daily activities. As effective pain relief decreases sleep disturbances, improvement in sleep has been proposed as marker of effective pain management. Hence it is useful to evaluate sleep disturbances in chronic pain population both in clinical and research setting. There are many tools to evaluate sleep quality; the routinely used simple brief pain inventory (BPI) has a single question about sleep. We will compare three dedicated sleep measures to the BPI in patients with chronic pain.
This pilot study is part of a global project that aims to better define and understand features of FBSS/POPS "post-operative persistent syndrome patients (shortened as "FBSS" in the following project). FBSS is the acronym for Failed Back Surgery Syndrome, which has been defined as a chronic condition resulting from spinal interventions. Despite anatomically successful spine surgery, a significant proportion of patients is experiencing chronic refractory back and leg pain. In a recent multicentre study conducted on more than 100 refractory FBSS patients, (ESTIMET Study), the mean delay between pain occurrence and FBSS diagnosis was 5 years. Therefore, FBSS pattern and potential responder stratification might guide us to eventually develop a decision tool for identifying FBSS patients. Easing and helping diagnosis of FBSS should improve referral yield to specialists and accelerate patient flow through the care pathway. Hence, FBSS patients, who usually present a long standing history of pain, would have access to "appropriate" therapies earlier. This could lead to better outcomes. The aim of this multicentre, prospective study is to collect specific data that are not collected in routine in order to better define and understand the potential FBSS population and to accelerate the diagnostic and optimize the choice of appropriate treatment. A multidisciplinary approach through a pain management clinical network, as it has been structured in Poitiers, will ensure that an exhaustive characterization of FBSS patients and their care pathway will be collected. In addition, since the cooperation between orthopaedic and neuro spine surgeons is not a common relationship found all over Europe (as it is observed in Poitiers), this study also aims to better understand the development of interactions between physicians/professionals and the substantial advantage which would result from bridging this gap. The N3MT (NeuroMapping Tools) software developed in Poitiers to collect data and assess objectively pain surface and intensity changes, before/after any treatment, with quantitative measurements, will be used as the central key of this project.
To understand pain pathophysiology in terms of risk factors and protective mechanisms ranging from molecular pathways to societal impacts.
The purpose of this study is to assess feasibility of using wearable sensors to capture objective assessments of patient's activity and sleep quality during the spinal cord stimulation (SCS) treatment continuum.
This pilot study will test the hypothesis that prolonged regional peripheral nerve block will reduce development of chronic pain in patients undergoing surgery for ankle fracture compared to standard of care. Subjects will be followed for one year.
This is a population-based study of type 2 diabetes patients with and without neuropathy recruited from the Danish National Type 2 Diabetes cohort (DD2). Perspective: The study will identify risk factors for developing diabetic polyneuropathy and painful diabetic polyneuropathy and provide information on the underlying mechanisms, which will hopefully contribute to significant improvements in the treatment and prevention of diabetic polyneuropathy in future.
This is a Phase III, placebo-controlled, multicenter study with an enriched-enrollment withdrawal (EEW) design to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CAM2038 in opioid-experienced subjects with moderate to severe CLBP that requires continuous, around-the-clock (ATC) opioid treatment ≥ 40 mg morphine equivalent dose (MED). The study includes 5 phases: A Screening Phase (up to 2 weeks), a Transition Phase (up to 2 weeks), an Open-Label Titration Phase (up to 10 weeks), a Double-Blind Treatment Phase including a Final Study Visit (12 weeks), and a Follow-up Phase (4 weeks). The overall duration of participation in the core phase of the study (randomized Double-Blind Phase) is up to 30 weeks, from the Screening Phase through the Follow-up Phase. Subjects who complete the Double-Blind Treatment Study Phase will be offered an opportunity to continue treatment in an open label safety extension for up to 60 weeks. Additional subjects may be recruited to open label safety extension to meet the goal of 100 subjects with 60 weeks of treatment.
The overall aim of the project is to evaluate the Help Overcoming Pain Early model (which includes patient education, person-centered health dialogues and pain/stress management), which is an adolescent-centered school health prevention program when adolescents have chronic pain. This is an intervention that has the hypothesis to support students to manage their chronic pain. The primary outcome is self-efficacy. Secondary outcomes are self-rated health, quality of sleep, pain intensity and school attendance. The project aims to evaluate the intervention through qualitative and quantitative data collection by students and school nurses. The project has a hybrid design, which means that outcomes of the intervention and the evaluation of the implementation are taking place in the same data collection. The results of this project can be of great importance in the early detection of students with chronic pain and promote their confidence in their own ability to manage their symptoms.
Pain in the neck and shoulders is a musculoskeletal disorder that affects a significant number of individuals.The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of PBMT (with a device that combines low level laser therapy and light emitting diode therapy) in chronic pain relief of musculoskeletal origin in the neck and shoulders area.
The central aim of this proposed study is to test a multimodal, mindfulness-oriented intervention designed to disrupt the risk chain leading to prescription opioid dose escalation, opioid misuse and opioid addiction, which are mounting threats to active duty service members and Veterans with chronic pain conditions, who may develop disordered opioid use as a consequence of long-term opioid pharmacotherapy.