Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Reducing postoperative pain leads to increased patient comfort and facilitates speedy recovery and discharge from the hospital following surgery. The focus of controlling postoperative pain has gradually shifted from postoperative management to intraoperative management. The investigators believe that this study is a unique opportunity to assess the adequacy of intraoperative analgesia, allowing for immediate administration of the appropriate opioid analgesics. The purpose of this research is to bring to light the applicability of facial electromyography as an intraoperative solution to postoperative pain management.


Clinical Trial Description

After consenting to enter the study, the subject will be asked a series of questions regarding his/her medical history. He/she will be shown the test for determining consciousness by squeezing the experimenter's hand when asked. It will be explained to him/her that once unconscious, he/she will not be able to respond to the command of squeezing the hand. The facial monitor will be shown to the patient, as well as its location of placement.

Intraoperative Period: The leads will be placed for the FACE monitor as well as for the BIS monitoring device. The objective of the BIS monitor which is already in use in the University Hospital Operating room suites is to determine consciousness. An identical and typical anesthetic protocol will be utilized for all the patients in order to eliminate anesthetic factors. The protocol is as follows:

After administration of propofol for induction, a forearm tourniquet device will be inflated to a pressure greater than 200 mm Hg. A muscle relaxant will then be given once the tourniquet is inflated while the arm with the tourniquet will not be paralyzed. This allows for a check on the unconsciousness of the patient; that is, the patient will be told, "squeeze my hand". It is expected that no patient will respond by squeezing his or her hand because they are unconscious and anesthetized. The maximum length of time the cuff will be inflated is 20 minutes. Tourniquets applied to the entire leg or arm are normally inflated for up to 120 minutes and are standard practice in orthopedic surgery.

One group of patients, determined randomly, will be administered 250 ug of fentanyl during induction of anesthesia, while the second group, also determined randomly, will be administered 50 ug of fentanyl. Both groups of patients will be administered an inhalational anesthetic (isoflurane, desflurane, or sevoflurane) at the level 30% above that which insures unconsciousness (called 1.1 MAC), but will not be given nitrous oxide during the 10 minutes of our study period due to this gas' effect on Hagihira's "loss of bicoherence" phenomenon.

The study period will begin 5 minutes before surgical incision, and will end 5 minutes after surgical incision. Our hypothesis is that central registration of pain exists despite the presence of adequate unconsciousness in the patient, and FACE technology will complement the use of the BIS (EEG) monitor to ensure effective administration of anesthesia for patients in the future. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00176696
Study type Observational
Source Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 2
Start date August 2005
Completion date April 2007

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05480111 - The Role of Quadratus Lumborum Blocks Following Minimally Invasive Hysterectomy Phase 4
Completed NCT06129305 - Erector Spina Muscle Distance From the Skin at Different Thoracal Elevations
Completed NCT04401826 - Micro-surgical Treatment of Gummy Smile N/A
Recruiting NCT04020133 - the Role of Popliteal Plexus Block in Pain Management After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction. N/A
Completed NCT03023462 - Efficacy of an Anterior Quadratus Lumborum Block vs. a TAP-block for Inguinal Hernia Repair N/A
Completed NCT03652103 - Efficiency of Erector Spinae Plane Block For Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy Phase 4
Completed NCT03546738 - Spinal Cord Burst Stimulation for Chronic Radicular Pain Following Lumbar Spine Surgery N/A
Terminated NCT03261193 - ITM + Bupivacaine QLB vs. ITM + Sham Saline QLB for Cesarean Delivery Pain Phase 3
Withdrawn NCT03528343 - Narcotic vs. Non-narcotic Pain Regimens After Pediatric Appendectomy Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02525133 - Phase 3 Study of Efficacy and Safety of the XaraColl® Bupivacaine Implant After Hernioplasty Phase 3
Completed NCT03244540 - Regional Analgesia After Cesarean Section Phase 4
Enrolling by invitation NCT05316168 - Post Operative Pain Management for ACL Reconstruction Phase 3
Recruiting NCT04130464 - Intraperitoneal Infusion of Analgesic for Postoperative Pain Management Phase 4
Enrolling by invitation NCT04574791 - Addition of Muscle Relaxants in a Multimodal Analgesic Regimen for Analgesia After Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty N/A
Completed NCT04073069 - Scalp Infiltration With Diprospan Plus Ropivacaine for Postoperative Pain After Craniotomy in Adults Phase 4
Completed NCT04526236 - Influence of Aging on Perioperative Methadone Dosing Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05351229 - Intrathecal Morphine for Analgesia in Video-assisted Thoracic Surgery Phase 4
Enrolling by invitation NCT05543109 - Ultrasound Guided Psoas Compartment Block vs Suprainguinal Fascia Iliaca Compartment Block N/A
Completed NCT05346588 - THRIVE Feasibility Trial Phase 3
Completed NCT04919317 - Combination Dexamethasone and Bupivacaine Pain Control in Reduction Mammaplasty Phase 2