View clinical trials related to Pain, Shoulder.
Filter by:This is a randomized prospective study to test if cooling therapies decrease narcotic pain medication use in patients following total shoulder replacement surgery (total shoulder arthroplasty, TSA). Postoperative standard care involves use of ice packs placed on the surgical site for periods of approximately 20 minutes every 2 hours, but they do not provide consistent temperature and can become uncomfortably cold. Continuous cryotherapy (CC) machines provide flow of continuous cooled water (45-55° F) via a cuff placed on the affected sight for several hours. There are mixed results as to whether CC is more beneficial than standard ice pack therapy. This study will address whether CC decreases pain and narcotic pain medication use compared to ice pack therapy in TSA patients. The investigators will monitor both patient-reported pain scores and actual narcotic use to test the hypothesis that use of CC reduces postoperative pain and the need for narcotic pain medication. The results of this study may help establish parameters for non-pharmacologic intervention to reduce patient reliance on narcotic medications.