View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:Ultrasound as a technique is safe, readily available, quick and portable allowing more accuracy of different regional blocks and local infiltration. It allows imaging of the mouth, oropharynx, infrahyoid structures, larynx, vocal cords, and trachea. Recently, ultrasound has been shown to improve accuracy in ultrasound guided block with local anesthetic infiltration. The objective of our study is to compare the effect of pre-emptive trans-oral ultrasound guided peritonsillar infiltration versus trans-cutaneous ultrasound (US) guided peritonsillar infiltration with bupivacaine for post-tonsillectomy analgesia, on surgical field, and surgeon satisfaction(intra-operative reactionary bleeding). Materials and Methods: the patients will be admitted for tonsillectomy at ENT department of the Al- Azhar university hospitals. The patients' ages between 3 to 15 years. Patients will be divided into Cutaneous group: patients will be submitted to Trans-cutaneous ultrasound guided peritonsillar infiltration with bupivacaine, and Oral group: patients will be submitted to Trans-oral ultrasound guided peritonsillar infiltration with bupivacaine.
The aim of the current pilot study is to investigate whether perioperative dysregulated systemic lipid mediator pathways (more specifically increased pro-inflammatory and decreased anti-inflammatory pathways) are associated with slower resolution of pain after surgery and increased risk for development of persistent postsurgical pain (PPSP). In addition, we will look for correlations between the pro-resolving lipid mediator profile and Quality of Recovery (QoR-15), duration of hospital stay, and frequency of complications, e.g. wound infections.
This study is a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effect of a simple counseling intervention on post-operative narcotic requirements, with the hypothesis that women receiving this intervention will use fewer narcotics for pain management following cesarean section.
Dilatation of the cervix is necessary before operative hysteroscopic procedures. This dilatation with Hegar dilators has certain difficulties and is associated with pain. Cervical priming with various substances soften the cervix, ease the entry for the operation and decrease complications such as uterine perforation. The investigators aimed to compare rectally administered "misoprostol" and" hyoscine butyl bromide" with sham protocol.
compare the analgesic efficacy of the combination of bupivacaine and morphine, bupivacaine and fentanyl and bupivacaine and ketamine in alleviating post operative pain following laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Presently, the standard of care at the investigators' practice is that the discharging physician decides the type and amount of opioid medication to prescribe a patient following a cesarean section. After informed consent has been obtained, patients will be enrolled in this randomized-controlled equivalence study. The experimental group will be prescribed 20 oxycodone-acetaminophen and the control group will be prescribed 28 oxycodone-acetaminophen at the time of discharge. Both groups will also be provided with a handout on non-opioid analgesia. The groups will be assigned randomly in blocks. The investigators will recruit patients either in the clinic, if participants are to have a scheduled cesarean section, or at some time during the hospital admission for delivery. The satisfaction survey and pain scale will be administered at the postoperative check by the clinic staff and providers. These surveys will be stored in a secure location at the clinic. If the patient does not show up for their postoperative visit, 3 attempts total will be made by an investigator to reach the patient and administer both surveys by phone within 2 weeks of discharge. A preliminary analysis of the data will be done once half the study patients have been recruited. The investigators do not foresee any threats to the external or internal validity of the study. The investigators are taking many measures to limit study bias. First, block randomization will help limit discrepancies between groups. Also, strict adherence to the inclusion and exclusion criteria will also help limit confounders that may make data difficult to interpret, such as non-opioid naïve patients and complications that may potentially increase pain and opioid requirements. Lastly, blinding of patients to the number of pills participants receive will help mitigate patient bias.
Despite current available analgesic drugs, post-surgical pain management remains challenging. A potential new target for analgesic drugs are group-II metabotropic glutamate receptors subtypes (mGlu2 and mGlu3 receptors), since growing evidence from animal models show that activation of these receptors produce s analgesic effects in inflammatory and in neuropathic pain states. . N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) is a safe agent and with little to no side effects. NAC can induce analgesia by activating the glutamate:cystein antiporter, causing endogenous activation of the mGlu 2/3 receptors. However, this has only been investigated once in the peri-operative setting, were it showed preliminary promising result of reduction in opiate necessity. In healthy subjects there was a significant reduction in pain ratings to laser stimuli and amplitudes of laser evoked potentials after NAC. Based on these promising results, we hypothesize that pre emptive intravenous NAC can reduce postoperative pain and thereby cause less necessity for escape analgesics like opiates.
Randomized double blind placebo controlled trial to compare the post-operative pain control advantages of post-incisional wound infiltration with liposomal bupivacaine to plain bupivacaine in patients presenting for elective caesarean delivery.
There are difficulties in the progress of the study and cancel the plan. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the postoperative pain control using non - opioidal analgesics in children. The investigators will investigate the effect of single use and combination of caldorol(ibuprofen) compare to denogan(propacetamol) in children. Participants who receive the laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair between 6 months and 6 years old are divided 3 groups(caldolor, denogan, combination). Each groups are received a medication by protocol during surgery. After operation patient's pain score and use of additional analgesics are recorded in postanesthesia care unit and general ward.
The study team propose to investigate the feasibility and pilot a Telephone Cognitive Behavioral Therapy intervention for those identified to be at risk for chronic pain following surgery.