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Pain clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05385965 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Meaning-Centered Pain Coping Skills Training for Cancer Pain

MCPC
Start date: February 9, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a randomized controlled trial of a psychosocial pain management intervention called, Meaning-Centered Pain Coping Skills Training (MCPC). Patients with advanced solid tumor cancer and pain interference (N=210) will be randomized to MCPC or a standard care control condition. Patient-reported outcomes will be assessed at baseline and 8- and 12-week follow-ups. The risk and safety issues in this trial are low and limited to those common to a psychosocial intervention (e.g., loss of confidentiality).

NCT ID: NCT05384613 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Quality Indicators on Analgesia, Sedation and Delirium in Intensive Care Patients and Their Impact on Outcome Indicators and Economic Indicators

Start date: May 12, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Retrospective cohort study to investigate the adherence to the process indicators for pain management, sedation management and management of delirium on outcome indicators and cost/revenues in individual patients and subcohorts.

NCT ID: NCT05374161 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

An Intervention for Female Breast CANcer: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (I-CAN-ACT) for Depression and Physical Pain

I-CAN-ACT
Start date: January 20, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

As a result of the cancer diagnosis and medical therapies, women with breast cancer often encounter debilitating cooccurring psychological and physical symptoms. While pain constitutes one of the most common adverse physical side effects of medical treatment reported by breast cancer patients, the most prevalent psychological symptom they seek psychological help for is depressive symptoms. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) in psychosocial oncology care may be particularly beneficial in targeting depression and cancer-related pain. The aim of the I-CAN-ACT project is to examine in a RCT the efficacy of a brief ACT-based intervention for both depression and physical pain (6 online sessions) compared to a waitlist control on various outcomes in women with breast cancer. Outcomes will include quality of life, physical pain intensity and interference, depression, and anxiety in women with breast cancer. These will be assessed at post-treatment and at the 1-month, 3-month, 6-month and 1 year follow-ups (for Marianna Zacharia's PhD thesis, results will be presented until the 3-month follow-up). Also, the Acceptability and Feasibility of the intervention will be assessed. That is, participants' treatment acceptability and adherence to the brief ACT intervention in terms of retention, treatment engagement and satisfaction with each session and with the overall treatment will be assessed. Participants' reasons for dropout will be recorded.

NCT ID: NCT05360940 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Dyspepsia Abdominal Burning Pain Diarrhea Dysentery

Concomitant Infection of Intestinal Parasites and Helicobacter Pylori

Start date: September 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Intestinal parasitic infections such as Giardia lamblia, Entamoeba histolyica and Enterobius Vermicularis are among the most common infections worldwide.So parasitic infections are considered one of the major health problems in the world especially in developing countries. Helicobacter pylori is a gram-negative,helical-shaped,motile bacillus bacterium,which colonizes the gastric mucosa. H.pylori bacterium secretes urease,a special enzyme that converts urea to ammonia. Ammonia reduces the stomach's acidity .This risk factor allows pathogenic intestinal protozoa such as G.lamblia to take the opportunity to cross through the stomach's increased pH and cause disease.

NCT ID: NCT05345600 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

MILTA vs Placebo Use Comparison for the Management of Pain Related to Perineal Scars Following Delivery

MILTADoIP
Start date: March 15, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The incidence of perineal scars after a pregnancy is high, either related to an episiotomy or to spontaneous perineal tears. These perineal scars can result in acute pain but also in chronic pain for some women. Medical treatment includes level 1 and 2 analgesics and, even for a few women, level 3 analgesic. The MILTA® uses photons which are emitted with low intensity in the visible and near infrared combining 5 physical principles to reduce pain : 1- The NPCL (Nano-Pulsed Cold Laser) emissions in coherent infrared light, at 905 nanometers; 2- Non-coherent emissions, pulsed by trichromatic RGB CSM diodes (400 to 650 nm); 3- Continuous non-coherent infrared emission monochromatic diodes at 905 nm; 4- A constant circular magnetic field (200 millitesla) equivalent to the terrestrial magnetic field and 5- The effect of magnetic tunnel which potentiates the light propagation. MILTA® treatment has been shown to be effective in various managements of pain, but has never been used in pain related to perineal scars. This randomized controlled trial aims at assessing MILTA vs placebo to reduce pain related to perineal scars after pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT05337709 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Pharmacist Provided Intervention (Education and Medication Review) in Osteoarthritis

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to initiate pharmacist intervention (educational and medication review) among osteoarthritis patients visiting community pharmacies.

NCT ID: NCT05335668 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Brain Circuitry Changes in Central Poststroke Pain: a Clinical and Neuroimaging Study

Start date: July 18, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Central poststroke pain (CPP) is estimated to affect up to 10% of stroke patients and is one of the most difficult-to-treat conditions with a detrimental effect on patient's quality of life. So far, no drug has proven efficient to alleviate CPP and neuromodulation approaches including Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) and motor-cortex stimulation have yielded mixed results with only a few patients experiencing long-term pain relief. To date, little is known about the pathophysiology of CPP. There is at present little evidence for a clear association between the specific location of lesions, clinical manifestation and phenomenology of pain as well as treatment response of CPP patients. Furthermore, the time delay between stroke occurrence and CPP occurrence is highly variable and the fact, that it is not immediate in the great majority of patients suggests that other factors contribute to the development of CPP. These factors have not been identified yet.

NCT ID: NCT05329467 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Validation of Pain Assessment Scale Faces Thermometer Scale (FTS)

Start date: September 17, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study was to psychometrically evaluate the electronic self assessment Faces Pain Scale (FPS). Validation is performed in relation to golden standard of pain scale assessments Faces Pain Scale Reversed (FPS-R) and Coloured analogue Scale (CAS). 600 children with a range of illnesses on various paediatric healthcare settings in Sweden, Island, Denmark and USA will be included. Pain assessment will take place postoperatively, in relation to procedures or in a setting where acute pain is identified.

NCT ID: NCT05326737 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Pain Trajectories After Surgery and Their Potential Relationship With Chronicity at 3 Months

ETADOL
Start date: February 23, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The effective management of acute postoperative pain remains a daily challenge despite the organizational efforts made and the techniques put in place. Thirty percent of patients who undergo surgery suffer from chronic post-surgical pain, of which 5 to 10% are of severe intensity. Many preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative factors, related to the patient, the surgical procedure, or the anesthetic technique, have been incriminated as risk factors for chronic post-surgical pain. The severity of acute postoperative pain is recognized as one of the risk factors for the occurrence of chronic post-surgical pain on which we can hope to interact during the peri-operative period. In this cohort study, we wish to define the typologies of postoperative pain trajectories observed from Day 0 to Day 7 and to estimate the proportion of patients with an abnormal resolution of pain in a model of organization such as that of our institution, in classic hospitalization and in ambulatory care.

NCT ID: NCT05323383 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

The Effects and Mechanisms of Brief Mindfulness Meditation and Hypnosis for Pain

Start date: March 24, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to determine the effects and mechanisms of 1 x 20-min training in mindfulness meditation and self-hypnosis relative to an inert control. Participants will be randomly assigned to condition. The dual primary outcomes will be pre- to post-training changes in current pain intensity and pain unpleasantness. The active treatments are hypothesized to produce greater reductions in pain outcomes than the control. It is also hypothesized that change in mindfulness will be a mediator specific to mindfulness meditation, while change in affect and decentering will be mediators of the hypnosis condition. Moderators of response will also be explored.