View clinical trials related to Pain.
Filter by:The study, known as the Peer suppoRt for adolescents and Emerging adults with Sickle cell pain: promoting ENgagement in Cognitive behavioral thErapy (PRESENCE), aims to determine the effectiveness of digital CBT in reducing pain, opioid use, and healthcare utilization among AYAs with SCD. It also seeks to understand the role of personalized peer support in enhancing engagement and outcomes of digital CBT interventions. By leveraging existing infrastructure for delivering virtual peer support interventions, tailored digital CBT programs for individuals with SCD, and partnerships with CBOs, the study aims to provide valuable insights into the feasibility and effectiveness of digital CBT as a pain management strategy for this vulnerable population.
This will be a double-blind randomized control trial in women with stress urinary incontinence who are undergoing an outpatient transurethral bulking procedure for stress urinary incontinence. Subjects will be identified by the University of Rochester urologists and urogynecologists participating in the study who currently oversee stress incontinence care. Subjects will be randomized into two groups. One group will be undergoing the cystoscopy with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) for analgesia, and the second group will have the cystoscopy with placebo TENS.
This study aims to determine the effect of using Coolsense, which is created using the proven effect of cold application during insulin injection, and Buzzy, which is a combination of vibration and cold application, in reducing pain and anxiety in children diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes mellitus.This randomized controlled clinical study is planned to be conducted between 05.2024-12.2025 with 147 participants between the ages of 6-12. Participants will be divided into three groups according to the randomization method: buzzy group (n = 49), coolsense group (n = 49) and control group (n = 49). Participants in the Coolsense group will receive a cold application using the coolsense device for 5 seconds before the injection. Participants in the Buzzy group will be subjected to vibration and cold application 30-60 seconds before the procedure. Participants in the control group will continue the clinic's standard procedure. Changes in participants' pain score and fear level, heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate and oxygen saturation will be measured at three time points: immediately before and after the procedure. Data descriptive information form, application registration form, Facial Expressions Pain Scale (FPS-R) and Child Fear Scale (CFS) will be used. The collected data will be analyzed using SPSS 15 software. The main questions it aims to answer: - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the pain score of children during the insülin injection? - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the fear score of children during the insülin injection? - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the heart rate of children during the insülin injection? - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the oxygen saturation of children during the insülin injection? - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the blood pressure of children during the insülin injection? - Does buzzy and coolsense application have an effect the respiratory rate of children during the insülin injection?
Volunteers are invited to undergo 4 insertions of a peripheral intra-venous 18-gauge catheter (PIVC); 2 insertions at the the start of the study on the plantar side of the hand/vessel at the dorsum manus, 2 insertions after 2-10 hours into the forearm/cubita with and without application of a 10-% lidocaine spray (5 hubs of xylocaine 10%-pump spray; AstraZeneca BV, Zoetermeer, The Netherlands) prior to the insertion of the PIVC.
INTRODUCTION: Currently, there is no scientific evidence about pain in the anesthetic blockage of the first finger according to the application method. However, clinical evidence has valued the use of carpule, due to the low pain it generates in the patient to the application of anesthetic. Most studies on anesthesia and pain, especially with the use of carpule and distracting methods, belong to the field of dentistry. OBJECTIVES: It is intended to determine the pain after an anesthetic block in H of Frost in the first finger with different application methods, such as syringe and carpule. As secondary objectives, it is intended to establish the difference in pain according to the sex and age of the patients. METHODOLOGY: Experimental, transverse and random clinical trial type analytical study, in which a sample of 200 individuals will be selected, 100 per group, which would require digital anesthesia of the first finger and that would fulfill the inclusion criteria. Result: after the completion of the study CONCLUSIONS: After the completion of the study
The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of baby massage applied to babies with retinopathy of prematurity on the pain and comfort of the newborn. This was randomised-controlled study in the NICU at the Health Sciences University Bursa High Specialization Training and Research Hospital, Bursa, Turkey. The population of the study will consist of preterms hospitalized in the neonatal intensive care unit during the time period of the study. In the calculation of the sample size, the power level was 80% and the significance level was 5%. When the effect size was determined as 0.8 in the examination of the difference between the experimental and control groups in terms of the premature infant pain profile (PIPP) variable, it was determined by the statistical expert that the number of babies to be included in each group was 26 and 52 babies in total should be included in the study. Based on this, the study sample was determined as 60 preterm infants in 30 experimental and 30 control groups. Block randomization method will be applied in the randomization of the groups. Case report form, PIPP=Premature Infant Pain Scale and Premature Infant Comfort Scale (PBIQ) will be used to collect the study data. Patients included in the study will be examined by the same ophthalmologist. The infant massage to be applied before the examination will be applied by a single nurse=researcher. Video recordings will be taken before and during the ROP examination and evaluations will be made by two neonatal nurses other than the researcher. Infants will be massaged by the researcher in accordance with IAIM guidelines and massage techniques. Total massage time will be equal for each infant. The researcher has an IAIM infant massage certificate. Before starting the infant massage, jewelry will be removed and hands will be washed. In the study, leg and face massage will be applied among the massage techniques in the IAIM guidelines.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effect on patient's comfort of a virtual reality experience during a procedure of cardiac electronic device implantation under local anesthesia.
The research will be conducted with children hospitalized in Tarsus State Hospital Children's Clinics and who meet the sampling criteria. The population of the study, which is planned as a randomized controlled experimental study, will consist of children aged 4-10 years old who are admitted to the pediatric surgery service of Tarsus State Hospital and will undergo outpatient surgical intervention. In collecting research data; the Introductory Information Form, Child Anxiety Scale, Child Fear Scale, Wong-Baker Pain Scale and Vital Signs Follow-up Form will be used.
The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the efficacy of trauma-adapted yoga as a complementary intervention to care as usual in child and adolescents psychiatry clinics, in the population of adolescents with the diagnosis of ADHD and/or PTSD. We hypothesize that trauma-adapted yoga (TAY) is an effective non-pharmacological intervention for adolescent with ADHD and/or PTSD. Aims: (1) Validate the impact of TAY on the mental health & quality of life of adolescents with ADHD and/or PTSD. (2) Investigate the feasibility of online TAY for continued self-care. (3) Explore adolescents' experiences & parental perspectives on TAY in their treatment. (4) Explore healthcare professionals' experience on the integration of TAY into clinical practice. Within and between group (yoga group vs waiting list) analyses will be performed.
The purpose of this study is to provide moxibustion treatment for diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) and to provide a reference for clinical treatment of DPN moxibustion. The first part: patients will be randomly assigned to 3 clinical centers, 18 in each center, and then equally divided into 2 groups, including routine treatment group and 15-minute moxibustion group. Patients in the routine treatment group were given mecobalamin tablets and epastat at the same time of daily treatment for 4 weeks (hypertension and hyperlipidemia combined with basic drug treatment). The frequency of moxibustion was 15 minutes per acupoint twice a week for four weeks. The results were evaluated during the baseline period (the day before the grouping), the treatment period (the end of the 8th treatment), and the follow-up period (2 weeks after the end of treatment). The results of this part are expected to confirm the therapeutic effect of moxibustion on diabetic peripheral neuropathy. The second part was divided into the moxibustion 15-minute group and the moxibustion 30-minute group, 75 cases in each group, and 50 cases needed to be assigned to each center. Except for the different durations of moxibustion, the moxibustion treatment methods and acupoints are the same. The results of this part are expected to confirm the optimal amount of moxibustion in the treatment of diabetic peripheral neuralgia and provide a reference for the standardization of clinical treatment of moxibustion.