Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Investigator Gender on Perceived Pain Intensity After Acute or Scheduled Surgery
Postoperative pain is a common problem after surgical procedures with many patients afflicted
worldwide. Fundamental challenges are the complexity of measuring pain appropriately, and the
many associated possible confounders. Over the last decades, gender of the investigator has
been identified as a conceivable bias in the assessment and management of pain in
experimental, as well as, clinical research. However, to the investigators knowledge this
issue has not so far been systematically investigated in a postoperative setting.
The objective of this study was to investigate whether the gender of the investigator has an
impact on the reported levels of pain intensity after acute or scheduled surgery.
In this prospective paired cross-over study, two investigators of opposite gender
independently obtained individually reported pain intensity levels in each study patient
based on three different methods of pain assessment the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), the
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS), and the Painmatcher® (PM) technique based on electrical
stimulation, in a postoperative study setting at a large urban university hospital in
southern Sweden.
Study design This prospective paired clinical cross-over study was carried out in three
different Post Anaesthesia Care Units (PACUs) at Skåne University Hospital in Malmö, Sweden.
All patients were supervised and managed according to the local standard of care. The
measurements were accomplished during daytime over a ten-week study period.
Two investigators, one male and one female, performed the measurements and collected the
study data. They were both senior medical students at the same level and of similar age (30
and 38 years, respectively). Postoperative levels of individual pain intensity were obtained
as early after arrival at the PACU as possible, depending on how soon the study patient was
alert enough to participate. Pain was evaluated in each study patient at two consecutive
study sessions at approximately 15-minute intervals, according to a predefined study
protocol. Half of the study participants were first evaluated by the female and then by the
male investigator, and the other half the other way around, according to a cross-over study
design.
Pain evaluation Postoperative pain intensity was assessed with three different study
techniques in each study patient.
The Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), is a long-established technique for measuring pain and
consists of a 100-millimetre scale ranging from 0 (no pain at all) to 100 (worst imaginable
pain). Individual scores were recorded with one decimal number (range 0-10.0).
The Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) is another well-known and reliable method for evaluating pain
in clinical practice. The rating is verbal, and the subject is asked to estimate current pain
intensity on an 11-point scale, where 0 indicates no pain at all and 10 the worst imaginable
pain. The study patients were asked to choose integers only, and no decimal numbers were
recorded.
The Painmatcher® (PM) is a rather new instrument (CEFAR Medical AB, Lund, Sweden) developed
for assessment of pain with a mild electrical stimulus.
The study patients were told to press two rubber electrodes of the device between their thumb
and index finger and to release them as soon as the gradually increasing systaltic sensations
in the finger tips induced by electrical current were considered comparable to their current
intensity of postoperative pain. On release of the buttons, the local pain immediately ceases
and a corresponding integer-based score is displayed on the device. Each patient went through
three measurements with the device during each study session.
Study procedures Each study session started with a short interview, where the study
participants were asked to shortly describe, in words of their own, the main character of
their postoperative pain. They were then requested to rate their current intensity level of
pain with the three different study techniques (VAS, PM and NRS in mentioned order). The
study patients were equally informed verbally on how to carry out the pain measurements and
were blinded to the study aim (of evaluating potential impact of investigator gender).
Additional information on surgical and anaesthetic procedures, including current analgesic
medication, was obtained from the peri-operative database of the hospital, and from
individual patient records.
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