View clinical trials related to Chronic Pain.
Filter by:This study will use multiple methods to assess the feasibility of conducting a fully powered multisite clinical trial to test the effectiveness of integrating mindfulness-based interventions into physical therapy for patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain and long-term opioid treatment. First, researchers will develop a manual for training physical therapists to provide mindfulness-based interventions to patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain and long-term opioid treatment. Next, the researchers will evaluate the competency of physical therapists to provided mindfulness-based interventions after being randomized to one of 3 different mindfulness training arms. Patients scheduled for physical therapy with the randomized physical therapists will be invited to enroll in the study. These patients will be asked to complete a variety of patient reported outcomes including self-reported average pain and the the amount of prescription opioid pain medication taken.
This post market study is being conducted to document the comparative effectiveness and safety of peripheral nerve stimulation plus conventional medical management versus conventional medical management alone in the treatment of chronic, intractable peripheral neuralgia of post-traumatic or postsurgical origin. This is a prospective, minimal risk, multi-center, randomized control trial.
This trial is to show the feasibility of administering a randomized clinical trial that determines the effectiveness of aquatic exercise compared to land-based exercise of military Veterans who have chronic pain.
Traumatic rib fractures (i.e., broken ribs caused by a physical injury) are common and very painful. They also often lead to serious complications, more time spent in hospital, and can even lead to death. Even after rib fractures have healed, they can lead to long-term pain and a lower quality of life. A technology called cryoneurolysis, which acts to freeze nerves causing pain using a small tool which can turn very cold, is a promising new way to manage rib fracture pain. This study is a test with a small number of people to see if it is feasible to use this technology for patients with rib fractures. If this is successful, we will recruit more people for a larger study to see if cryoneurolysis, along with standard pain control techniques, is better at stopping pain, compared to just the normal techniques alone. Participants in our study will be asked to rate their pain, and record pain medications that they take for 3 months after their pain procedure.
This clinical trial uses transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) using the patented tKIWI system to safely reduce self-reported chronic pain with little to no side effects to improve our understanding and ability to accurately diagnose pain disorders which would facilitate the development of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic treatment modalities using deep learning architecture built into the tKIWI.
This protocol is for a pragmatic mixed methods randomized parallel-group exploratory feasibility trial to examine all facets of a proposed future phase III trial on the use of wearable device to increase physical activity and possibly reduce pain amongst middle-aged people with musculoskeletal (MSK) chronic pain. The feasibility study is intended to answer the following research questions: Question 1 Evaluate the acceptability of all aspect of the study design of wearable devices as an intervention to increase physical activity in middle-aged adults with musculoskeletal chronic pain. Question 2: Is it feasible and acceptable to use wearable devices as an intervention to increase physical activity in middle-aged adults with musculoskeletal chronic pain? Question 3: How can using wearable device promote physical activity effectively in middle-aged adults with musculoskeletal chronic pain? Participants will be recruited from a National Health Service (NHS) pain clinic and randomised on a ratio1:3 into control group (standard care) and intervention group (standard care combined with wearable device). The feasibility study will last for 18 months, participants involvement will be for 24 weeks. Patients in both groups can participate in any physical activity, including planned, structured, and repetitive bodily movement exercise or occupational and recreational PA. Qualitative semi-structured interview will be conducted at baseline and week-12, while outcome measures will be conducted at baseline, 4-week, 8-week,12-week, and 24-week for all participants to examine their pain, physical activity, and their responses to the trial. Qualitative interview will be conducted for stakeholders which include clinicians and service managers after all patient data has been collected. This study has the potential to make an original contribution to provide key data on the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of using wearable technology to support physical activity intervention for middle-aged adults with musculoskeletal chromic pain.
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility of administering auricular acupressure for patients with interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS), and evaluating the efficacy of auricular acupressure to reduce pain scores and decrease pain medication usage over time.
This study was conducted with 519 patients in order to examine the clinical and cost-effectiveness of different exercise trainings in patients with chronic pain and the adherence of the patients to the exercises given. The patients were divided into 3 groups as home-based exercise groups, physiotherapist-led groups and home-based follow up groups, and traditional physical therapy was applied for a total of 10 sessions. The patients were offered exercises in the form of a brochure to the home-based exercise groups, applied to the exercise group under the guidance of a physiotherapist, and to the home-based follow up groups in a way that reminded them of the exercises by sending a daily text message (SMS) after they were given exercise training accompanied by a physiotherapist. They were told to continue their exercises after the treatment. All groups were evaluated in terms of economic, clinical, quality of life, exercise adherence, and satisfaction three times: before the treatment, after the treatment, and three months after the treatment. Cost utility analysis (QALY) and cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) were used as part of the economic evaluation. Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Neck Disability Index (NDI) were used for clinical evaluation. Quality of life was assessed with the EuroQol General Quality of Life Scale (EQ-5D-5L). A scale consisting of 5 (five) questions prepared by us was used for adherence with the exercise. In the evaluation of satisfaction, individuals were asked to give a score between 0-100. All three groups were called to the hospital for control three months later, and the 5-question scale prepared by us was directed to the patients and it was determined how the given exercises were done.
A pre-post, single-group, quasi-experimental design will be used to determine the acceptability, feasibility, and appropriateness of a theory-based, 8-week/16-session virtual Tai Chi Easy (vTCE) intervention for adults with OUD, anxiety, and chronic pain. This dissertation has three Aims: 1) Determine the feasibility of an 8-week/16-session, vTCE intervention for adults with OUD, CP, and anxiety; 2) Determine the perceptions of the vTCE intervention participants by conducting a focus group interview post-vTCE; 3) Explore within-subject changes in generalized anxiety, chronic pain intensity, opioid use, opioid cravings, and basic psychological needs post-vTCE.
The purpose of this study is to introduce and test the usefulness of a reflective process meant to empower people with chronic pain and help support participant's resiliency and thriving. The study team hypothesizes that: -Greater or equal to 80 percent of participants will report that the intervention was relatively easy to understand after orientation, low burden, potentially effective, and will have completed at least 2 of the 3 reflective tools.