View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that treatment with OXN PR tablets is non inferior to treatment with OXY PR tablets in terms of analgesic efficacy in patients with postoperative pain after knee arthroplasty based on average pain intensity scores.
The use of paravertebral catheters is a recommended technique to achieve postoperative analgesia after thoracic surgery. To date there is no consensus on which drug regime (local anesthetics with or without opioid) is best. The aim of this prospective clinical trial is to determine wether the use of ropivacaine and sufentanil injected through a thoracic paravertebral catheter results in decreased acute postoperative pain compared with plain ropivacaine in patients after thoracoscopic lung surgery.
To compare the incidence and severity of nausea in the study treatment groups, during the 18-hour period starting 6 hours after titration to pain relief; following confirmation of the assumption of non-inferiority between the two groups of pain relief over the 24 hour post-operative period. Pain relief and nausea will be determined by measuring the areas under the curves of pain intensity and nausea verbal rating scale scores.
The management of post-operative pain in patients after vaginal surgery provides many unforeseen challenges. Although vaginal surgery is considered a minimally invasive approach for the repair of pelvic floor prolapse and urinary incontinence, patients may still experience varying degrees of discomfort and post-operative pain. Narcotics, however, can introduce a host of problems in addition to the potential addictive properties of the medication. A vicious cycle ensues as patients seek better pain control at the expense of worsening constipation, but without adequate control of pain after surgery, voiding dysfunctions are often exaggerated. Cyclobenzaprine (Flexeril®) in conjunction with NSAIDs has long been the basis for management of acute musculoskeletal injuries, but the practice of prescribing this centrally acting muscle relaxant for post-operative patients has also been successful in the management of pain. An online search of medical databases revealed that there are currently no published retrospective or prospective studies determining the efficacy of cyclobenzaprine in post surgical patients in conjunction with traditional pain management. The investigators hypothesize among healthy patients undergoing elective vaginal surgery for pelvic organ prolapse, the short-term use of a muscle relaxant could reduce the spasticity of the pelvic floor muscle attributable to surgery and thereby reduce the use of narcotics. Consequently, the reduction of narcotics and the control of post-surgical pain may also hasten the return of normal urinary and defecatory function.
In this multicenter, randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial, hyperalgesia area around the scarce following colorectal laparoscopic surgery (piece removal) will be assessed in 3 groups of patients : group 1: continuous ropivacaine preperitoneal infusion, group 2 : intravenous lidocaine infusion, or group 3 : control group without local anesthetics. All patients will receive parenteral analgesia combining acetaminophen and morphine.
A history and physical focused on clinical sequelae of breast implant rupture was completed by patients to assess long-term clinical sequelae of SKY0402 and its relation to the silicon shell.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a continuous infusion of local anesthesia with a catheter in the surgical wound reduces patient consumption of opiates by 30% in the 48-hour postoperative period following surgery for colorectal neoplasm and hepatic surgery versus the continuous infusion of physiological serum.
The transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block involves the sensory nerve supply of the anterior -lateral abdominal wall where the T7-12 intercostal nerves, ilioinguinal, iliohypogastric and the lateral cutaneous branches of the dorsal rami of L1-3 are blocked with an injection of local anesthetic between the internal oblique abdominal muscle (IOAM) and the transverse abdominal muscle(TAM)This technique allows sensory blockade of the anterolateral abdominal wall via local anesthetic deposition superficial to the transversus abdominis muscle. It was first described by McDonnell et al. as a landmark technique to provide analgesia for lower abdominal surgery. Hebbart et al. subsequently described an ultrasound guided technique for the TAP block which they named posterior TAP block. The ultrasound allows identification of the external oblique abdominal muscles (EOAM),IOAM and TAM. Previous studies about ultrasound -guided regional anesthetic techniques suggest improved block quality and safety, which is primarily due to direct visualization of the relevant anatomy, the tip of the needle, and the spread of the local anesthetics. Clinical trials of the single shot posterior TAP block have shown a significant reduction in morphine consumption during the first 24-36 hours after surgery. More recently, El-dawlatly et al. demonstrated that ultrasound guided TAP block in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy reduced perioperative opioid consumption by more than 50%. This is the first study to evaluate the effect of TAP block in the quality of recovery in patients undergoing laparoscopic hysterectomy and may help the pathway to make this an outpatient procedure.
Ketamine affects postoperative pain when administered intravenously immediately before, during or at the end of surgical procedures. We assessed the effects of multiple and escalating doses of ketamine administered many hours before surgery on postoperative pain and analgesia consumption.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether lornoxicam or paracetamol is more effective in providing pre-emptive analgesia for adult patients undergoing elective unilateral inguinal hernia repair under general anesthesia.