View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:Erector spinae plane (ESP) block is an interfacial plane block with visceral and somatic analgesic activity at paraspinal muscles.ESPB has been successfully applied as a part of multimodal analgesia in treating postoperative pain in spinal surgery. However, it may be difficult or impossible to perform lumbar ESPB in obese patients or cases of increased lumbar lordosis. This study aims to investigate the effectiveness of ESPB applied by the intraoperative surgeon.
many methods were considered to control postoperative pain in laparoscopic bariatic surgery including non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, opioids and neuraxial block but subcostal (TAP) block has provided good analgesic effect when used as a part of multimodal analgesia in bariatric surgery due to lack of visceral block
The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of adding different doses of MgSO4 to bupivacaine via OSCTAB block on postoperative pain control for 24 hours in patients scheduled for LC.
Optimal pain control with limited muscle weakness is paramount for a swift initiation of physical therapy and ambulation. Fascia iliaca compartment block (FIC) has been recommended since it offers the best pain control with low risk of motor block. Pericapsular nerve group block (PENG) with lateral femoral cutaneous block (LFCN) has been proposed as an effective alternative to FIB that offers similar pain control with a considerably lower risk of motor block. The aim of this study is to compare the afore mentioned blocks and determine which one yielded the least degree of quadriceps femoris muscle weakness and the better pain control (the lowest NRS score with least need for opioids).
The goal of this prospective clinical randomized study is to evaluate the effect of different obturation techniques on postobturation pain in single-visit root canal treatment in 18-60 years old patient who present no systemic disease (American Society of Anesthesiology class I or II) and require nonsurgical root canal treatment The main question it aims to answer which obturation technique used with bioceramic sealer cause less postobturation pain in single-visit root canal treatment in comparison to AH plus sealer used with lateral condensation or warm vertical compaction. Participants will receive single visit root canal treatment using bioceramic sealer with different obturation techniques Group 1: Single cone technique Group 2: lateral condensation technique Group 3: Vertical compaction technique to see effect of different obturation technique on postobturation pain in single-visit root canal treatment.
This is comparative interventional study, will be conducted in patient indicated for surgical extraction of mandibular third molar at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial surgery, College of Dental Surgery, BPKIHS, Nepal. Verbal and written will be taken . Participants meeting inclusion criteria will be included in the study and will be divided in to two groups, group A (Oral combination of paracetamol-500mg and ibuprofen -400mg) and group B ( Transdermal diclofenac patch-200mg) using computer generated randamization. Extraction will be carried out using standard protocol. Aformention drugs will given to participants accordingly for management of post operative pain.Tramadol will be given to each patient as rescue analgesics and allowed to have if pain score exceeds 7.post operative instruction will be given carefully. Rescue phone number will be provided in case of emergency. Telephonic interview will be performed at 12, 24 and 72 hours post operatively and pain score using numeric rating scale will be recorded.Any adverse effects of drugs will be recorded. The data collected will be entered in Microsoft excel sheet. It will then be transferred into SPSS (Statistical Package for Social Sciences) for statistical analysis.
PROSAP-A is a perioperative randomized, controlled trial with a 12-month follow-up period after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) or total hip arthroplasty (THA), aiming to investigate both acute and long-term postoperative effects of preoperative sleep-promotion. Participants with clinically significant insomnia symptoms will be randomized to a brief, hybrid version of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) or sleep education therapy, administered over a 4-week period, prior to surgery. The primary objectives are to evaluate effects of preoperative sleep-promotion on acute and long-term postoperative pain control. Secondary objectives include evaluation of postoperative sleep, recovery, mental health, cognitive function and alterations in blood biomarkers.
To study the efficacy of the PENG block on the duration of postoperative analgesia. There are two groups of patients, who are undergoing hip joint surgeries, one group (Control Group) will receive spinal anesthesia only while the other group (PENG Group) will receive PENG block before spinal anesthesia.
In addition to the traumatic effect of the operation, the effort to immobilize the auxiliary respiratory muscles due to pain causes a decrease in postoperative respiratory function (especially in thoracic and upper abdominal surgeries). In addition, superficial and tachypneic breathing caused by the inability of the patient to take deep breaths with pain leads to closure of small airways and increase in intrapulmonary shunts, resulting in hypoxia. Postoperative pain management is important not only to prevent pain but also to reduce pulmonary complications that may occur due to changes in lung function and to reduce mortality and morbidity by controlling the stress response. Pain after nausea and vomiting is the most common reason for hospitalization after laparoscopic surgery. Although pain in laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) has many components including incisional, visceral and reflected, the primary source of pain is incisional pain. A multimodal analgesic approach (NSAII, paracetamol, opioids, local infiltration, facial plane blocks and paravertebral and periparavertebral blocks) is recommended. Regional anesthesia combined with general anesthesia reduces the stress response associated with surgery and reduces the need for opioid use. Subcostal TAP Block; injection of local anesthetic between the internal oblique and transversus abdominis muscles in the upper quadrant of the anterior abdominal wall blocks the anterior cutaneous branches of the thoracoabdominal nerves. External Oblique Fascial Plane Block (EOIB); blocks both the anterior and lateral cutaneous branches of the thoracoabdominal nerves. It is performed between the 6th-7th costae. There is a cutaneous sensory block between T6-T9 in the midabdomen and T6-T10 in the anterior axillary line. The conventional method is the administration of intravenous opioids as a method of postoperative analgesia when the routine block cannot be performed due to a contraindication.
Nowadays, the incidence of breast cancer is the first number of malignant tumors, and the primary treatment method is surgery.With the development of medical technology and concept, radical mastectomy combined breast reconstruction are becoming more and more popular.But the reconstruction caused greater trauma and more severe postoperative pain.ESPB is a new nerve block method which thought to reduce pain after thoracic and breast surgery.However, there are few studies on radical mastectomy combined breast reconstruction. So, this randomized controlled study is conducted to explore its impact on postoperative pain and thus provide more data guidance for clinical.