View clinical trials related to Acute Postoperative Pain.
Filter by:Cryoneurolysis is a regional anaesthetic technique that works by freezing peripheral sensory nerves. This technique can potentially provide analgesia after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, the technique is expensive and comprehensive. Pain 24 hours after surgery is associated with high amounts of late acute pain. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to compare the effect of postoperative cryoanalgesia with a sham treatment on acute postoperative pain in TKA patients with moderate to severe pain on the first postoperative day. The cryoanalgesia treatment will be performed 24 hours after surgery. Afterward, the patients will be followed for 24 weeks to determine the level of pain among other outcomes.
This study will use group-based trajectory modeling to identify the different postoperative pain trajectory groups that exist in a mixed surgical population (non-cardiac surgery) of elderly patients during the first seven days after surgery. The aim of this study is to explore the diversity in the development of postoperative pain among elderly patients and to identify the risk factors for acute pain trajectory after surgery by investigating demographic, psychological, and clinical variables. The predictive effect of different trajectories of early postoperative acute pain on postoperative chronic pain will also be explored.
To address the preemptive analgesic effect of preoperative gabapentoids versus no gabapentoids in orthopedic surgery