View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:A prospective, randomized, placebo controlled, double-blinded study at a single institution.
Study to compare between efficacy of post-caesarean section infiltration with lidocaine and epinephrine versus lidocaine only to reduce post-incisional pain.
Continuous femoral nerve blocks (CFNB) provide effective pain control to patients undergoing total knee replacement (TKR). However the resulting motor blockade can lead to decreased quadriceps muscle strength and delayed functional recovery.The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of Liposome Bupivacaine infiltration into the knee to CFNB on pain control and functional recovery
This randomized clinical trial was designed to assess the clinical efficacy of Pulsed electromagnetic field PEMF delivered with a wearable device in terms of postoperative pain and quality of healing after mandibular third molar extraction. The sample included 120 patients undergoing unilateral mandibular third molar extraction. The devices were positioned over the area corresponding to the extraction site and wearers were asked to keep them in place for 7 days. All patients were asked to record pain (on a visual analog scale [VAS]), hours of wearing the device (groups T and P), and any use of analgesics. At 7 days, healing complications (dehiscence, tumefaction, pus, local lymphadenopathy, pain on palpation, postoperative bleeding, alveolitis) were recorded blindly.
Evaluated the effect of perioperative parecoxib administration on postoperative pain, analgesic use, function recovery, inflammatory response and bleeding risk.
We investigated the safety and efficacy of the bilateral periarticular cocktail injection at a reduced dosage in patients undergoing simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of EXPAREL in a transversus abdominis plane block by assessing the demand of postoperative narcotic, length of hospital stay and incidence of postoperative complications.
This is an open-label dose-escalating study to evaluate the tolerability and systemic exposure of MDT-10013 in men and women at least 18 years of age who are undergoing primary unilateral TKA.
Compare the analgesic effects of naproxen sodium codeine, paracetamol codeine and placebo on postoperative pain and tramadol (Contramal) consumption during the first 24 hour after a lumbar disk surgery.
The main objective of the trial is to complete a double-blinded randomized controlled trial of a lumbar plexus block with the Shamrock technique versus the Lumbar Ultrasound Trident technique by estimating the time of performance of lumbar plexus blocks in healthy volunteers. Secondary objectives include a) estimates of number and depth of needle injections, distance of injection site from the midline, minimal electric nerve stimulation to trigger muscular response and the type of response, and volunteer discomfort during block injection, b) measurements of plasma lidocaine and mean arterial blood pressure, c) examinations of sensory block of the dermatomes T8-S3 and motor block of the femoral nerve, the obturator nerve, the hip abductor muscles, and the hamstring muscles, d) success rate of lumbar plexus block, e) perineural and epidural distribution of local anesthetics added contrast visualized on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning, and f) cost-effectiveness for the Shamrock technique versus the Lumbar Ultrasound Trident Technique for lumbar plexus block in healthy volunteers. The hypothesis is that the Shamrock technique is faster to perform than the Lumbar Ultrasound technique, and that the success rate of the Shamrock technique is equal to or higher than the Lumbar Ultrasound Trident technique.