View clinical trials related to Acute Pain.
Filter by:The investigators will assess whether behavioral science-based interventions can "nudge" providers towards more evidence-based care for patients with acute non-cancer pain. Aim 1) Among opioid naïve primary care patients with acute non-cancer pain, compare the effect of the provider-targeted behavioral interventions (opioid justification and provider comparison), individually and in combination, on initial opioid prescription, initial use of non-opioid management, and patient-reported pain and function. Aim 2) Compare the effect of the 2 provider-targeted behavioral interventions, individually and in combination, on unsafe opioid prescribing and transition to chronic opioid therapy. Aim 3) Assess provider satisfaction and experience with the provider-targeted behavioral interventions. Hypotheses: Aim 1, H1a: Compared with the guideline (usual care) alone, the addition of the opioid justification and provider comparison behavioral interventions will be associated with a decreased proportion of opioid prescription and increased proportion of non-opioid management at the initial outpatient visit for acute non-cancer pain. Aim 1, H1b: Compared with usual care (guideline) alone, the addition of the opioid justification and provider comparison behavioral interventions will be associated with no difference in patient-reported pain, function, and satisfaction at 1, 6, and 12 months. Aim 2, H2: Compared with the usual care (guideline), the addition of opioid justification and provider comparison behavioral interventions will be associated with a decreased proportion of patients receiving unsafe opioid therapy and a decreased proportion of patients transitioning to chronic opioid therapy. Study Design: Pragmatic, cluster-randomized clinical trial in 48 primary care clinics. Study Population: The patient population will be 19,855 opioid naïve adults who present to clinic with acute uncomplicated musculoskeletal pain or headache. Primary and Secondary Outcomes: The primary outcome measures will be receipt of an initial opioid prescription and unsafe opioid prescribing. Secondary outcomes will be non-opioid pain management, and, in 514 patients, patient-reported pain and function. Analytic Plan: The investigators will test for differences in the primary and secondary outcomes among the 4 intervention groups. Once completed, the project will provide evidence that health systems and other stakeholders need to implement interventions to prevent unsafe opioid prescribing.
The optimal dose of ketorolac in the Emergency Department setting is no clear. We will compare 3 doses to determine the optimal dose.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the preemptive effect of ultrasound guided popliteal scistic nerve block on postoperative acute pain in patients with bilateral hallux valgus. After induction of general anesthesia, the leg to be operated first is decided randomly. After the operation of one leg is completed, PSNB is performed on both legs with 0.2% Ropivacaine and surgery is started on the remaining legs. When the surgery is over, check to see which foot pain begins first, how strong the pain is, and whether there are any side effects.
Pre-existing pain and severe postoperative pain are predictors of persistent pain after surgery, but a complete understanding on the development of persistent pain is still lacking. The study aims to identify clinically relevant and genetic risk factors for persistent postsurgical pain that can be reliably distinguished statistically.
Evaluate the effect of addition of morphine, dexmedetomidine to bupivacaine in PVB could improve the analgesic effect and thus reduce postoperative morphine consumption and development of chronic neuropathic pain, compared to PVB with bupivacaine , in patients undergoing major breast cancer surgery, i.e., modified radical mastectomy (MRM) and breast conservation surgery with axillary lymph node dissection.
This is a prospective, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study designed to examine pain relief following intrathecal morphine sulfate (0.2mg) in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA) under spinal anesthesia in addition to a femoral nerve catheter. The protocol consists of two parts: (1) a prospective patient recruitment study and (2) a retrospective assay for endocannabinoids on previously collected specimens.
Observational Study of Pain Reduction in Late Stage Cancer Patients Receiving Low-Dose Chemotherapy
We hypothesize that patients who receive a supraclavicular block via Angiocath, placed intra-operatively and dosed post-operatively following neurologic examination, will have lower pain scores, lower use of intravenous morphine equivalents in the post-anesthesia care unit, and lower rates of intervention for post-operative nausea and vomiting. We also hypothesize that patients receiving this nerve block had the same rates of nerve damage as the patients who did not receive a block and that there will be no demonstrable safety concerns with this block.
This randomized pilot clinical trial studies pregabalin in preventing acute pain syndrome in patients receiving paclitaxel. Pregabalin may control the pain caused by cancer treatment.