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Clinical Trial Summary

Patients will be randomized prospectively to one of two groups. One group will receive 5 mg/kg of 1% lidocaine, and the other will receive .9 normal saline, instilled into their VAC sponge ½ hour prior to VAC dressing change. All patients will complete a pain assessment tool prior to receiving the instilled lidocaine/placebo, immediately after the procedure and 1 hour after the procedure. Pain scores will then be compared between the lidocaine and placebo groups.

Risks: Lidocaine toxicity is a potential risk, but 5 mg/kg of 1 % Lidocaine is below toxicity thresholds in an adult.


Clinical Trial Description

• All Burn service patients (inpatients and outpatients in burn clinic) who are receiving VAC therapy will be screened for study inclusion criteria. Those with allergies to lidocaine will be excluded. Participants will be enrolled until a sample size of 80 wound VAC changes is achieved. Up to 4 VAC dressing changes can be included in this study per participant. Subjects will be randomized prospectively for each dressing change. Utilizing a randomized bracketed approach, patients will be assigned to one of two groups: Lidocaine group or Placebo group. The Pharmacy Research Center (PRC) will assign patient a study Identification (ID) number and record it along with their medical record number on the Master Study ID List. They will then randomize the participants by drawing randomly shuffled green vs white index cards. (40 white card = 0.9 normal saline and 40 green card = 5 mg/kg of 1% Lidocaine). They will draw up the appropriate amount of medication to be used, label it with the patients Medical Record (MR) #, date, and administration instructions and deliver it to the nurse who is doing the VAC dressing change. They will keep the Master Randomization Data Collection Tool in a locked drawer in her office. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00585325
Study type Interventional
Source University of Wisconsin, Madison
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2004
Completion date November 2008

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