View clinical trials related to Morphine.
Filter by:This study will examine the impact of the peripheral opioid antagonist methylnaltrexone on the onset of effect of ticagrelor in morphine treated patients with ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Half of the participants will receive methylnaltrexone, while the other half will receive placebo.
This study will investigate if a single shot of spinal morphine will increase patient satisfaction when compared to intravenous morphine in Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy
36 patients with interstitial lung disease will be randomized to 1 weeks treatment with morphine hydrochloride as oral linctus 5 mg, four times a day, and 5 mg as needed up to 4 times a day, or corresponding doses of placebo. VAS score for dyspnea will be evaluated after 1 hour and 1 week at follow up. Other questionnaires will also be evaluated (GAD-7, K-BUILD, Leicester score)
The effect of epidural low-dose morphine-soaked microfibrillar collagen sponge in postoperative pain control after posterior lumbar spinal surgery: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study
The main objective is to assess the efficacy of Alfentanil for pain in children treated by tracheal suction in pediatric intensive care units in France, compared to Sufentanyl, the current standard treatment.
Rationale: Obesity is an increasing health risk worldwide, with the USA recording prevalence in adults of around 20%. The mean body weight of obese patients is also increasing. One of the strategies to treat extreme obesity (Body Mass Index (BMI) > 40 kg/m2) is weight-reducing surgery like laparoscopic gastric banding or gastric bypass. During anaesthesia, morbidly obese patients are exposed to an increased risk at developing postoperative wound infections, apnoea and thrombotic events and may be more difficult to intubate. Routinely, amongst others, cefazolin, morphine, nadroparin and atracurium are administered in standard dosages. However, it is not known to what extend the pharmacokinetics and/or -dynamics of these drugs are affected in morbidly obese patients. Therefore, evidence-based dosing schedules for these drugs in morbidly obese patients should be developed. Objective: The study is performed in order to develop population pharmacokinetic and/or pharmacodynamic models of the routinely used drug therapies during bariatric surgery in morbidly obese patients (BMI > 40 kg/m2): cefazolin, morphine, nadroparin and atracurium. A covariate analysis will be performed in order to account for variability in pharmacokinetic and/or pharmacodynamic parameters. This covariate analysis will take into account procedure and patient bound covariates, with specific interest for body weight as a covariate. Whenever possible, non-obese patients will be included in the covariate analysis. The results will be used to develop individualised dosing schemes for routinely used drugs peri-operatively in morbidly obese patients. Study design: A randomised, prospective, observational, therapeutic and invasive study. Study population: Morbidly obese patients with a Body Mass Index > 40 kg/m2 undergoing laparoscopic banding or gastric bypass surgery, 18-60 years old. A total of 20 patients will be included in the study. Intervention (if applicable): All measurements and data collection will take place around administration of drugs that are given according to routine clinical practice (cefazolin 2 grams for prophylaxis of infections, morphine 10 mg intravenously at the end of surgery, a patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) pump with morphine for postoperative pain relief and nadroparin 0,6 ml for trombo-embolic prophylaxis). For muscle relaxation, patients are randomised to receive one of two generally accepted dosing regimen of atracurium (0.5 mg/kg based on ideal body weight or 0.5 mg/kg based on total body weight). Peri- and postoperatively, a maximum amount of 70 ml of blood will be collected from an indwelling arterial line for measurement of concentrations of cefazolin, morphine, and anti-Xa (nadroparin). One week after surgery the patient will be checked for thrombosis using ultrasonography. Main study parameters/endpoints: Primary endpoints to evaluate in morbidly obese patients are; - pharmacokinetic parameters of cefazolin in blood; - pharmacokinetic parameters of morphine and metabolites in blood; - time course of anti-factor Xa levels in blood following nadroparin; - time course of the pharmacodynamic effect of atracurium. Secondary endpoints to evaluate in morbidly obese patients are: - to compare primary endpoints (obtained in morbidly obese patients) with data of non-obese patients - the occurrence of postoperative wound infections; - postoperative pain scores, sedation scores and nausea scores; - the occurrence of bleedings or thrombotic events ; - required amounts of morphine (PCA); - to compare the time course of the pharmacodynamic effect of two different doses of atracurium.