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Acute Pain clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01982539 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Safety and Tolerability of Zipsor® in Pediatric Subjects (Ages 12-17 Years) With Mild to Moderate Acute

Start date: November 2013
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

As part of the PREA(Pediatric Research Equity Act) commitment, the objective of the study is to confirm safety and tolerability of 25 mg of Zipsor® in clinical pediatric subjects.

NCT ID: NCT01975753 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

First Evaluation of Morphine Hydrochloride by Nebulisation in Healthy Volunteers

AEROMORPH1
Start date: May 13, 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Acute pain relief in emergency setting is still a public health priority. Pain is the primary reason for emergency room use, but the situation of "oligo-analgesia" persists in all countries. Intravenous morphine titration has become the standard method for severe acute pain management in the emergency department, but it is still insufficiently implemented. Deviations from the recommended protocol are common: initial additional loading doses, unusually extended intervals between bolus, premature discontinuation. Several factors contribute to these difficulties: heaviness of its setting up, especially in overcrowding case, procedure rigidity, high consumption of nursing time. This method requires a systematic intravenously route, which has several inconvenients: algogenic procedures, coupled initial diagnostic venous sampling (delay for analgesia), excessive "medicalization" of ambulatory patients (risk of infection and less mobility in the emergency department). An alternative to reduce the analgesic latency in emergency department, without losing the benefits of tolerance and safety should be welcome. The inhaled route looks promising, but has yet not been enough evaluated in adults, and even less in the emergency room. Aerosol techniques change from one study to another (molecules, materials, doses, painful intensities included, judgment criteria and assessment times). A morphine titration by aerosol therapy could be an interesting alternative to the standard method disadvantages, using faster, painless and easier procedures, leading to "demedicalization". To the need for stronger fundamentals, an additional study was designed in healthy volunteers. The objective is to compare the titration of intravenous morphine titration aerosol in moderate acute pain caused by electrostimulation. To purchase this aim, we first need to determine accurately the smallest dose of effective and well tolerated inhaled morphine, to provide the "bolus" dose we have to repeat by titration, which is still currently unknown. This dose is called ED50, it's the effective dose for at least 50% of healthy volunteers relieved. ED50 for intravenous morphine is also needed to be established, unknown in this indication. The determination of these two parallel ED50 would allow a reliable conversion factor between the two routes of administration for morphine "bolus", which can then be tested in comparative titrations. To validate our induced pain model in healthy volunteers, we also have chosen to fix in these conditions the ED50 of fentanyl that the effective dose by nebulization is better known. This study would also describe the pharmacokinetics of inhaled morphine and its derivatives after a single spray.

NCT ID: NCT01949480 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Pain Management

Ultrasound-Assisted Paravertebral Block v. Traditional Paravertebral Block For Pain Control

Start date: July 1, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall purpose of this research study is to compare the effectiveness of ultrasound assisted paravertebral block placement versus traditional "blind" technique for postoperative analgesia following thoracotomy or visually assisted thoracoscopic surgery.

NCT ID: NCT01904149 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

Oral Treatment for Gynaecological Post-operative Pain With Dexketoprofen Trometamol and Tramadol Hydrochloride

DAVID lap
Start date: May 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of single and repeated doses of fixed combination of dexketoprofen trometamol (DKP) and tramadol hydrochloride (TRAM) in comparison to the single agents (and placebo for the single dose phase only). Approximately 600 female patients presenting moderate to severe pain after a total/subtotal abdominal hysterectomy are eligible to be randomised provided that they experience moderate to severe pain on the day after surgery.

NCT ID: NCT01902134 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

Oral Treatment for Orthopaedic Post-operative Pain With Dexketoprofen Trometamol and Tramadol Hydrochloride

DAVID-art
Start date: April 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of single and repeated doses of fixed combination of dexketoprofen trometamol (DKP) and tramadol hydrochloride (TRAM) in comparison to the single agents (and placebo for the single dose phase only) Approximately 600 male and female patients presenting moderate to severe pain after an elective primary hip arthroplasty are eligible to be randomised provided that they experience moderate to severe pain on the day after surgery.

NCT ID: NCT01887951 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

Penthrox Versus Tramadol for SCDF

PENTRA
Start date: February 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Introduction Current practice in Singapore Emergency Ambulance Service (EAS) includes the use of analgesia delivered via inhalation Enthanox (Nitrous Oxide). However there are difficulties administering Enthanox on-scene due to the added weight of carrying bulky cylinder tanks. It is common for a delay in administration of analgesia. Inhaled methoxyflurane (Penthrox) is a potential agent for early administration of analgesia by Singapore Civil Defense Force (SCDF) EAS. It is extensively used in the pre-hospital setting in Australia. However data on its use as an analgesic agent in general are limited and there are few published controlled trials of methoxyflurane in an analgesic role. Intramuscular (IM) tramadol is a common medication used in the hospital setting for analgesia. It is well proven, simple to deliver and is not a controlled drug. Aim To compare Penthrox and Tramadol in the treatment of acute pain in patients transported by the SCDF EAS. Methodology The trial will recruit 400 eligible patients over 1 year (200 Penthrox and 200 tramadol). Patients managed by SCDF EAS for treatment of acute pain and who meet the eligibility criteria will be recruited into the study. Half of SCDF's 30 ambulances (15 ambulances), will be randomly assigned, equipped and trained to carry the new medication (Penthrox). The other half (15 ambulances), will be trained and equipped with tramadol. Allocation will be on a per station level. After 6 months, they will cross over to Penthrox and tramadol respectively. All paramedics will be trained to use both medications, pain scales and Ramsey scores, and will record patient's pain, sedation scores and patient satisfaction as part of routine clinical practice. All patients will be followed up by a review of their Emergency Department and hospital records for any medication related adverse effects. Hypothesis The investigators hypothesize that in patients with acute pain (pain score ≥3), presenting to the ambulance service with musculo-skeletal trauma (limbs or back); pain relief by inhaled methoxyflurane will be equivalent to IM tramadol, as assessed by Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) at 5, 10, 15 and 20 min after start of the study treatments.

NCT ID: NCT01876121 Completed - Clinical trials for Patients With Traumatic Pain, Post-surgical Pain and Tooth Extract Pain

Celecoxib Japan Observational Study for the Patients With Acute Pain

Start date: July 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This study is to assess the safety and efficacy of celecoxib on the pain relief from acute pain.

NCT ID: NCT01872910 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

A Study of LY3023703 Testing Pain Relief After Wisdom Teeth Removal

Start date: June 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to test if a single dose of LY3023703 relieves pain after wisdom teeth removal. The study will last about one week for each participant, not including screening.

NCT ID: NCT01848951 Completed - Surgery Clinical Trials

Comparison of Epidural and TAP Block in Abdominal Surgery

Start date: February 1, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will compare the infiltrative transversusabdominis plane (TAP) block with liposomal bupivacaine to epidural analgesia (EA) in major abdominal surgery . The efficacy of the TAP block for abdominal surgery is well documented in literature, but there are no studies utilizing long-acting bupivacaine. The investigators believe the study will demonstrate no difference between the two in terms of pain scores and opioid consumption, but TAP blocks will decreased costs, urinary retention, and hypotension.

NCT ID: NCT01826383 Completed - Acute Pain Clinical Trials

Improving Parental Soothing by Video

Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study sets out to compare the effectiveness of a parent pain management coaching video that is 5-minutes in length. The investigators will be comparing an active-video to a placebo-video of equal length (and identical formatting). Participants will be 6 or 18 month infants undergoing routine immunization. The investigators hypothesize the active video will result in a lowering of infant pain expressed post-immunization (3 minutes) and the increase in the parental use of distraction, physical comfort, and rocking.