View clinical trials related to Chronic Pain.
Filter by:Phase III, international multicentre, parallel group, blinded, 1:1 randomized controlled trial to determine the effect of an intraoperative intravenous lidocaine infusion on reducing the development of persistent pain 3-months after breast cancer surgery.
Background: Current pain management strategies for pediatric patients are not integrating the analgesic potential of movement-based therapies. To date, experiencing a painful stimulus has been known to disrupt motor activity in an attempt to minimize injury. However, physical activity, even when it increases ongoing pain initially, has been shown to significantly reduce pain symptoms eventually through neuromodulation. In both acute and chronic pain cohorts, exercise protocols and neuromodulation paradigms have produced exercise-related analgesia. Problem: It is not currently understood which brain regions are implicated in exercise-based analgesia and what brain regions moderate this response. Approach: The investigators intend to provide a physical activity intervention designed to promote exercise-induced analgesia. This intervention will be performed in a group of pediatric subjects with Chronic Widespread Pain Disorder. An exercise (n=10), no exercise (n=10) and healthy control (n=10) group will be recruited. Aims: This study has three aims: (1) To understand how thermal pain sensitivity, pain symptoms and motor performance are impacted in patients with chronic pain after an exercise-based intervention. (2) To evaluate the brain regions involved in a simple motor task as well as how motor activity influences activity in pain regions of the brain. (3) To evaluate the network structure of the brain, with special emphasis on motor and pain regions, in youth with a pain disorder who have undergone an exercise-based intervention. Exercise-based therapy in pediatric subjects with a chronic pain condition is predicted to reduce pain symptom reporting through biasing activity in pain regions during motor performance. Significance: Findings from this investigation will address the clinical side of pain management strategies and provide potential therapeutic targets and feasibility data. The investigators anticipate that findings will show how pain and motor regions of the brain interact at the network level and if this interaction can be modulated through exercise. Findings will also evaluate the brain regions that mediate the analgesic properties of an exercise-based pain therapy and provide future therapeutic targets.
Introduction: The association between chronic widespread pain (CWP) and disability is well-established. Although research support large inter-individual differences in functional outcomes, limited studies are available on the socio-economic consequences of offering stratified treatment based on prognostic factors. Identification of predictors of long-term functional outcomes such as work disability as a critical consequence, could assist early and targeted personalised interventions. The primary objective of this cohort study is to identify prognostic factors for the primary endpoint work status (employed and working vs not working) in patients with CWP assessed 3- years from baseline, i.e. at referral for specialist care. Methods and analyses: Data are collected at the diagnostic unit at Department of Rheumatology, Frederiksberg Hospital. The first 1,000 patients >=18 years of age registered in a clinical research database (DANFIB registry) with CWP either "employed and working" or "not working" will be enrolled. Participants must meet the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 1990 definition of CWP, i.e. pain in all four body quadrants and axially for more than three months and are additionally screened for fulfilment of criteria for FM. Clinical data and patient-reported outcomes are collected at referral (baseline) through clinical assessment and electronic questionnaires. Data on the primary endpoint work status at baseline and 3- years from baseline will be extracted from the Integrated Labour Market Database, Statistics Denmark and the nationwide Danish DREAM database. Prognostic factor analysis will be based on multivariable logistic regression modelling with the dichotomous work status as dependent variable.
The aim of this study will be to investigate the effect of an opioid-free anesthesia regimen with a mixture of dexmedetomidine-lidocaine-ketamine in the same syringe versus fentanyl analgesia in elective laparoscopic gynecological surgery
The proposed research topic will investigate the determinants of physical activity (PA) levels in patients with chronic pain. The aim of the research project is to quantify the self-reported and free-living physical activity levels in people with chronic pain. Describe and explore the characteristics and relationships of these participants in terms of pain severity, fear of movement, patterns of activity, anxiety and depression, and number and differing types of long term conditions and how these all correlate with PA levels. Explore PA levels of chronic pain patients and the correlation of psychosocial factors.
The primary purpose of this study is to establish if an individualized, impairment-based orthopedic intervention (IOI) can improve pelvic floor function and pain in women with Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP). Dry needling will be used as a part of the IOI to intervene upon peripheral muscles stiffness previously found to be more stiff in this population compared to healthy controls. This study is intended to initiate a line of research aimed at assessing widely used orthopedic physical therapy practices to address orthopedic impairments and muscle stiffness differences in women with CPP potentially decreasing time to care for a widely experienced condition. This study will guide potential future studies aimed at intervening upon a larger population and establishing the characteristics of participants who respond favorable to orthopedic care alone. First, this study will establish if this type of intervention has an effect on pelvic floor function and symptoms, pain, and muscle stiffness, all of which are often priorities of treatment for PHPTs treating CPP. A single-subject design is well suited in studying an intervention on such a heterogeneous patient population that does not currently have physical therapy treatment subclassifications. Future studies could help to establish possible subclassifications of CPP to include an orthopedic or peripheral muscle stiffness classification and empower therapists with associations between peripheral orthopedic and myofascial dysfunction and pelvic floor function and pain. This line of research could help prioritize which patients require specialty care, who could initiate care with an orthopedic PT, and who may resolve dysfunction and pain with orthopedic PT alone.
This project examines, in chronic pain, the mechanisms of immersive virtual reality compared to the mechanisms of placebo hypoalgesia. The potential of developing new non-pharmacological premises for low-risk interventions for pain management is high.
This pilot study is being performed to examine whether epidermal axons are altered in patients taking opioid therapy for chronic non-cancer pain, and if epidermal axonal changes predict heightened pain sensitivity.
To determine if decreased production or release of endogenous opioid peptides by peripheral immune cells contributes to hypersensitivity in people with HIV
This study will examine the effectiveness of Low-Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) for the management of pain in various locations of the body. All subjects selected for participation in the study will be assigned to a LLLT treatment group for a duration of 12 sessions.