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Phantom Limb Pain clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Phantom Limb Pain.

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NCT ID: NCT05608733 Not yet recruiting - Pain, Chronic Clinical Trials

Continuous Sciatic Nerve Block vs Epidural Analgesia in Lower Limb Amputation for Postoperative Pain

Ampupain
Start date: December 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Controlled clinical trial of two parallel groups, with random assignment 1:1, non-inferiority, blinded for the patient, for who administers the intervention and for who analyzes the data. 112 participants

NCT ID: NCT05194800 Not yet recruiting - Phantom Limb Pain Clinical Trials

Virtual Mirror Therapy for Relief of Chronic Phantom Limb Pain

Start date: May 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to further investigate the use of Virtual Mirror therapy for alleviating symptoms of chronic phantom limb pain. This initial pilot study will inform a fully powered randomized control trial which will include both upper and lower extremity amputees

NCT ID: NCT04897425 Not yet recruiting - Neuropathic Pain Clinical Trials

Mindful SensoriMotor Therapy With Brain Modulation in Highly Impaired Extremities

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Brief summary: This single-arm, pilot clinical investigation aims to evaluate Mindful SensoriMotor Therapy (MSMT) enhanced with brain modulation as a treatment of pain due to sensorimotor impairment, such as Phantom Limb Pain (PLP). MSMT consists of consciously retraining the motor and sensory networks used by the missing limb via myoelectric pattern recognition and haptic feedback. In this trial, we further enhance the effect of MSMT by brain modulation, transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS).

NCT ID: NCT03855930 Not yet recruiting - Phantom Limb Pain Clinical Trials

Phantom Limb Pain Triggered by Micturition

Start date: February 25, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Phantom Limb Pain ( PLP) is pain that is perceived and referred to a region of the body that is no longer present. in most patients, severity and frequency of phantom pain attacks gradually decrease over several weeks to 2 years following amputation, however in 5-10% significant pain remains a serious problem. It has been hypothesized, that deprivation of various inputs from the limbs to the brain cause an abnormal neuro-signature to be produced generating cortical maladaptive neuroplasticity and reorganization. Areas representing the amputated body part are taken over by neighboring representational zones in both the somatosensory and motor cortex generating pain in absence of stimuli. A seminal paper published by Lotze et al "Phantom movements and pain: a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study in upper limb amputees. - participants had to pucker their lips at a metronome-paced speed while functional magnetic resonance images were taken. Only in amputees with phantom-limb pain did a shift of the mouth representation into the hand representation occur; those without pain and the healthy control do not display a similar shift. Scarce reports have been made on a similar phenomenon- micturition induced lower limb phantom pain. We speculate that a similar maladaptive central nerve system (CNS) plasticity in which this genital representation would invade cortical areas with somatotopic affiliation to the lower extremity could be implicated in the pathophysiology of this phenomenon.