View clinical trials related to Pain, Postoperative.
Filter by:A monocenter, prospective, double-blind, randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will be designed to investigate if ketorolac 10 mg is as effective for pain relief as the standard dose of 30 mg in patients undergoing robot assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) or hysterectomy by laparoscopic assisted vaginal hysterectomy (LAVH) or total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH). It is hypothesised that the postoperative pain score at rest at 8 hours after surgery when receiving ketolorac 10 mg is non-inferior to the pain score at rest when receiving ketolorac 30mg.
This subject intends to explore the value of intraoperative celiac plexus block in postoperative acute pain management and its promoting effect on patients' rapid recovery during epigastric laparotomy through a randomized controlled trial.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Thoracoscopic pulmonary resection is a prevalent management for early stage of lung cancer. Placement of chest tube is the standard procedure after surgery, which causes pain that cannot be ignored. The investigators aimed to determine whether a muscle layer fixation of thoracic drainage tube could release postoperative pain in patients with uniport thoracoscopic pulmonary resection compared with conventional skin fixation.
With this pilot investigation, the investigators aim to challenge the reliance on opiate analgesia following colon and rectal surgery. Narcotic misuse and abuse is a pressing public health concern, and reduction in prescription rates could help to mitigate this issue. The goal of this pilot study is to establish feasibility of sufficient post-operative pain control after colectomy using non-narcotic analgesics. The investigators hypothesize that patients will be able to manage their post-operative pain without narcotic intervention, while minimizing side effects and complications. This initial pilot study will provide proof-of-concept for a larger, randomized investigation on non-narcotic analgesia after colectomy.
The project is of a comparative nature. It seeks to study pain reduction following two forms of chest surgery and compare results between both procedures. It will use kinesio taping as the studied pain reducer. It will involve 4 study groups, 2 per surgical procedure, and among those 2 main groups, 2 subgroups each where 1 has kinesio taping and the other doesn't. With this, the project hopes to offer new forms of pain reduction that are more cost effective and are associated with less adverse effects. Furthermore it would decrease pain killer intake which is a contemporary challenge of medicine.
The prevalence of post-surgical lumbar neuropathic radiculopathy is approximately 30%. Poor response to the treatments recommended for neuropathic pain, namely antidepressants and/or gabapentinoids, requires the development of new techniques to prevent this chronic pain. Certain well-tolerated techniques, such as the administration of plasma enriched with platelets and fibrin (PRF), are increasingly used in regenerative medicine for their anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties. Thus, a periradicular intraoperative application of PRF may have an analgesic effect on the intensity of residual postsurgical neuropathic pain after disc herniation surgery.
In this study, the investigators are testing a new formulation of lidocaine for its suitability in managing postoperative pain after pelvic (circumcision, inguinal, scrotal), perineal (hemorrhoidectomy) or perianal (fistulotomy) incisions. The new formulation ST-01 is a sustained release lidocaine formulation and is expected to provide pain relief over multiple days. Currently, the drug lidocaine is not available as an injectable slow-release formulation.
Video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) is frequently performed in thoracic surgery. It is widely accepted that VATS causes acute pain. Many factors such as postoperative analgesia treatment plan, operation time, number of chest tubes, and duration of chest tube stay can affect acute pain. This acute pain prolongs the discharge time of the patients and increases the frequency of postoperative pulmonary complications and postoperative morbidity. Postoperative acute pain may cause chronic pain in the later period, and may adversely affect the quality of life of the patients. This study, it was aimed to analyze the symptoms of chronic pain in the 1st and 3rd months postoperatively in patients who had undergone VATS.
Postoperative pain after laparoscopy may be localized pain resulting from incision due to many (two or three) punctures (somatic pain) or due to manipulation of the intra-abdominal organs as ovaries, uterus, omentum, and intestine (visceral pain) or shoulder and back pain caused by retained CO2 in the peritoneal cavity with its irritation effect on the diaphragm.Patients will be divided into two groups: Intraperitoneal (IP) group (20 patients):They will receive 100 ml normal saline infused over 10 min immediately before the induction of anesthesia and then continuous infusion of 500 ml normal saline intraoperatively then intraperitoneal wash of 100 ml normal saline containing 30 mg/kg MgSO4 at the end of laparoscopy. Intravenous (IV) group (20 patients):They will receive 100 ml normal saline containing MgSO4 30 mg/kg infused over 10 min immediately before the induction of anesthesia and then continuous infusion of 500 ml normal saline containing MgSO4 (8mg/kg) intraoperatively then intraperitoneal wash using 100 ml normal saline at the end of laparoscopy
Cesarean section is one of the painful operations that require adequate postoperative analgesia. Patients are divided into two groups: Multimodal (DMM) group ( 30 patients): patients will receive spinal anesthesia with 10-12.5 mg bupivacaine and 1 ml containing 2 mg dexamethasone, 50 µg morphine, and 500 µg midazolam. Morphine (M) group (30 patients): patients will receive spinal anesthesia with 10-12.5 mg bupivacaine and 1 ml containing 200 µg morphine