View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:This study will trial the impact of teaching surgical patients a pain self-management approach to compliment medical post-surgical pain management.
Control of intraoperative and postoperative pain with the use of opioids constitutes normal practice. Opioid free anesthesia (OFA) is a relatively recent anesthesiology practice according to which opioids are not administered during surgery and are avoided postoperatively. Opioid free anesthesia seems to provide better quality of postoperative analgesia while protecting the patient from the side effects of opioids such as respiratory depression, postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), opioid induced hyperalgesia and postoperative cognitive dysfunction. The aim of this study is to investigate the possible difference in the intensity of postoperative pain (based on the numeric rating scale 0-10) and the presence of PONV in patients undergoing transurethral urologic surgery under general anesthesia, when patients receive randomly either opioid free anesthesia (OFA) or opioid based anesthesia (OBA).
To understand how patients perceive the quality of care they receive when given different post-operative analgesic medications. Specifically the investigators want to assess whether patients who receive non-opioid analgesia following surgery endorse appropriate quality and satisfaction with their care compared to those who receive opioid medication.
Assessment of quality of post mastectomy analgesic protocol of Gabapentin and Dexmedetomedine in a placebo-controlled study
This is a single-center, randomized and prospective trial of all patients undergoing S-ICD implantation. Subjects will only be eligible for this study if they are ≥ 18 years of age and eligible to undergo S-ICD implant at Mount Sinai Morningside Hospital. They will be randomized to receive either surgical infiltration of local anesthetic or truncal blocks. Intraoperative and postoperative data will be collected including total opioid use, pain scores postprocedure, total postoperative narcotic need and length of stay.
This is a phase III, monocenter and randomized study, which evaluates the effectiveness of peritoneal gas drainage on postoperative pain in laparoscopic or robotic laparoscopic gynaecological surgery. This study aim is to assess the efficacy of active gas extraction with a drain (arm A) in comparison to manual evacuation (arm B,) in terms of pain incidence reduction linked to laparoscopic or robotic laparoscopic surgery.
Adenotonsillectomy surgery in paediatrics is commonly managed as an ambulatory surgery. This may be attributed to the use of the electro-dissection surgical technique that decreases the incidence of immediate postoperative haemorrhage. However, the use of the electro-cautery technique increases postoperative inflammation. This study aimed to compare the glossopharyngeal nerve block using the blind technique with the use of the ultrasound guidance Primary: FLACC score in the two groups 0,2,4,6 h after surgery at rest and with swallowing Secondary: need to analgesics, the difficulty of the technique, time consumption, recovery time, surgeon satisfaction, parents satisfaction, staff nurse satisfaction, anaesthetist self-confidence
The investigators will evaluate the effect of preoperative education on postoperative opioid.
When performing laparoscopic appendectomy in children, regional anesthetic techniques are rou-tinely used concomitantly with general anesthesia. These techniques include local infiltration of the trocar wounds or transverse abdominal plane block (TAP block). In 2018, a position paper of the European Society of Pediatric Anaesthesiology advised for TAP block over local infiltration of the trocar wounds. However, there is no randomized study comparing both techniques in children. The aim of this study is to compare morphine consumption during the first 24 postoperative hours in children undergoing laparoscopic appendectomy and randomly allocated to either local infiltration of the trocar wounds or TAP block.
Knee replacements are the second most common surgery in Canada. Most patients recover very well but research consistently shows that 1 in 5 patients still have pain many months after surgery. Doctors often prescribe opioid medications for pain after surgery (e.g. Percocet, hydromorphone, codeine). These medications can be helpful for some people, but they can also be dangerous, particularly when used for a long time. Many patients don't like the way opioids make them feel and would prefer alternative pain management strategies. Some people become addicted to opioids, have a difficult time reducing the dose of opioids, or have lasting health problems after using them. People in this study will be randomized to either have usual care or a new pathway designed to improve pain control and decrease opioid use after knee replacements. This study will have an intervention coordinator who will assess patients before surgery and who will follow up with patients regularly after surgery to make sure their pain is controlled and to avoid long-term opioid use. This study will use education, physiotherapy, psychological therapy, ice/cold, and non-opioid pain medications. As pain medications may work differently in different patients, the coordinator will check on each patient to look for pain control and assist to reduce the amount of opioids used after surgery. This study will help people have safer and more effective pain management after surgery which may lead to better recovery, higher satisfaction, and a lower risk of being harmed by opioids after surgery.