Acute Traumatic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Treatment by IN Ketamine to IV Morphine in Acute Pain
Patients who present with acute traumatic injuries in the pre-hospital setting or to the emergency department (ED) are treated with opioids, the current gold standard for severe acute pain therapy. Treatment with opioids has many disadvantages: the need of skilled manpower to administer the medication IV, numerous side effects- mainly cardiorespiratory depression- which necessitates post medication administration continuous monitoring of patients. IV administration may be difficult or impossible to provide in a number of extreme circumstances. For these reasons, there is a constant search for alternate treatment options for pain in acute traumatic injuries. IN ketamine has only recently been studied favorably in our department in adults, in an open, prospective study (Shimonovich at al 2016), and warrants further investigation in the setting of acute traumatic pain. Ketamine is a safe and efficacious analgesic and is overall well received both by patients and physicians. Side effects include: hallucinations and dissociation. As opposed to opioids, ketamine does not alter patients' respiratory and hemodynamic stability giving ketamine great therapeutic potential for pain reduction in trauma patients, pre-hospital patients, and battlefield injuries. The study we are conducting is designed to test and analyze the safety and efficacy of IN Ketamine compared to IV morphine in a setting of acute traumatic pain in the ED, when both medications are administered by the protocol as is customary for treatment of pain in the Emergency Medicine department, and will be a prospective, randomized, double blind, controlled study.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 120 |
Est. completion date | December 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - be 18-70 years old - self-report pain greater than or equal to 7/10 on a numerical-verbal scale - weigh 50-100 kg - have an ASA (American Society of Anaesthesiologists' classification) score of 1-2 - have systolic blood pressure of 90-160 mmHg Exclusion Criteria: - have had opioid analgesia administered within 2 hours of the study - are chronic analgesia users (of opioid or others) - have known allergies to morphine or ketamine - have had a large meal within an hour prior to trauma - are pregnant - have a psychiatric history - have nasal congestion, nasal trauma, epistaxis, or a deviated nasal septum - have suffered any head or face trauma: any trauma that is manifested by an external mark in the face or skull. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Israel | Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, department of Emergency Medicine | Tel Aviv |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center | Medical Corps, Israel Defense Force |
Israel,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Effectiveness of intranasal ketamine in decreasing pain intensity [patient assessed - VAS pain score] [ Time Frame: 2 hour post administration | Time to achieve a clinically meaningful pain reduction was defined as the first time-point at which the patient reported 15mm of pain reduction or more. Maximal pain reduction was defined as the lowest VAS score reported by the patient over the course of follow-up. Time to maximal pain reduction was defined as the time at which the patient has the lowest VAS score over the course of the 2 hours follow-up. | 2 hours | |
Secondary | • adverse effects [Opiate Related Symptom Distress Scale] [ Time Frame: 2 hour post administration ] | Adverse effects were recorded at the end of two hours using the 'Opiate Related Symptom Distress Scale' and included measurements of the presence, frequency, intensity and disruptiveness of 12 common opiate side-effects. Among these were nausea, vomiting, urinary retention, constipation, difficulty concentrating, dizziness, confusion, and others. | 2 hours | |
Secondary | • patient satisfaction [Interview] [ Time Frame: 2 hours post administration ] | patients were asked to provide subjective comments | 2 hours post administration |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Active, not recruiting |
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