View clinical trials related to Pain.
Filter by:This study is a randomized controlled and single-blind study consisting of qualitative and quantitative stages to evaluate the effect of aromatherapy massage on cramp frequency, cramp pain severity and quality of life in crampy hemodialysis (HD) patients.
ROSTRA is an international, prospective, non-randomized, single-arm, multi-center, and post-market study to collect real-world safety and effectiveness data on Abbott's IonicRF™Generator and compatible RFA accessories. This post-market study is intended to satisfy EU MDR requirements. The study will enroll up to 180 subjects at up to 10 sites in Europe and the United States. The total duration of the study is expected to be 19 months, including enrollment, data collection from all subjects, and study closeout.
In Turkey, 63% of geriatric people who make up approximately 8.3% of the entire population live in their own living environment, 36% live with their children and 1% live in nursing homes. The number of individuals living in nursing homes is increasing as the nuclear family structure becomes more evident. National Social Security programs give special importance to nursing home restructuring and Social Health Policy aims to increase practices related to "aging in place" and "Active and Healthy Ageing" for geriatric individuals. In this context, projects aimed at preventing secondary negative symptoms in aging and supporting the quality aging process are outstanding. The aim of this study is to assess and compare cognitive functions, balance, musculoskeletal pain severity, psychological state, participation level in activities of daily living, and quality of life of geriatric individuals living different environments.
Poor adherence to pain management and high pain intensity associated with serious, advanced illness is a major public health concern. This randomized clinical trial will test the efficacy of a newly enhanced digital pain and pain management application (e-PainSupport) for use in a home hospice setting. The e-PainSupport application delivers an education module about pain management to patients and caregivers, expedites pain reporting to nurses, and facilitates adherence to pain management. The overall goal of the e-PainSupport application is to improve pain management and reduce patient pain intensity in the home hospice setting.
The high prevalence of knee osteoarthritis and the absence of well-defined protocols for the application of Magnetotherapy (MT), makes it necessary to investigate the effect of this therapy on patients with knee osteoarthritis. Furthermore, no studies are comparing the effectiveness of the two interventions proposed in this project (MT) and microwaves (MW), which are routinely applied in clinical practice, without solid scientific evidence to justify their use. The purpose of the present clinical trial is to compare MT with MW both combined with a therapeutic exercise program in patients with painful knee osteoarthritis and its influence on pain and function.
This project will use novel methods to detect clinically meaningful subgroups of older adults based on long-term trajectories of bothersome pain and function. It will then identify older adults at high risk of experiencing poor long-term pain and function. Anticipated results will provide new insights into long-term patterns of pain and function across the aging process and identify potential predictors of each trajectory.
This is a randomized, 3-days study with the objective to compare the modulation of pain from our musical intervention to the CPT-induced analgesia and silence. The mean pain felt before and after CPT, the silence, and at three times points for the music conditions, 2.20 minutes, 11.30 minutes and 20 minutes, will be evaluated. Based on previous data, the sample size has been estimated, and 30 participants will be enrolled. They will undergo four conditions: CPT, silence, Most-Liked Music (MLM) and Least-Liked Music. The music used will be Music Care, a personalized musical intervention used in clinical settings. It has a U shape in six sections that each have different tempi, number of instruments and volume. There will be two music conditions: the most-liked-music (MLM) and least-liked-music (LLM) conditions. The sequence rated the highest will be listened to during the MLM and the one rated the lowest will be listened during the LLM condition. MLM will be considered as a score between 7 and 10 on the preference scale. LLM will be considered as a score between 0 and 4. The cold pressor test will consist in the immersion of the participants' arm in 10 degrees circulating water for two minutes. The silence condition will consist of six minutes in which the participants stay seated on the examination chair without access to their phones or other provided distractions. There will be three testing days for each participants. They will be seated in a comfortable chair in a quiet room. The first day, before the pain tests started, consent form will be read and signed by the participants. After, the MLM and LLM will be determined. Then, the sociodemographic questionnaire, the two State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) subscales, Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) will be administered. Finally, a first two minutes pain test will be performed (T1), the CPT and a second pain test (T2). The second and third day will consist of first the STAI, the state subscale, the silence condition and then one music condition. The order of music condition will be randomized. The silence condition will consist of a first pain test (T3 or T8), six minutes of silence and then a second pain test (T4 or T9). Those 6 minutes will be chosen in order to equal the duration between the end of the first pain test and the start of the second one of the music intervention condition. In fact, for the music condition, whether it's the MLM or LLM, the first pain tests will be performed at 2.20 minutes after the music started (T5 or T10). The second will be after the relaxation phase at 11.30 minutes (T6 or T11) and the third after the whole 20-minutes cycle (T6 or T12). A post music condition score of the MLM and LLM on the same preference scale as the selection will be administered. Quantitative data will be described using mean, standard deviation, median, extreme values (minimum and maximum) and the number of missing data. Qualitative data will be described by their distributions in terms of numbers and percentages by class as well as the number of missing data. The normality condition will be verified using the Shapiro-Wilk test. Quantitative variables will be compared by the paired Student test if conditions were checked or by the non-parametric test of the signed Wilcoxon ranks, as part of the comparison of 2 modalities. The quantitative variables will be compared between the 3 conditions using a repeated-measure ANOVA or Friedman test. Tests will be bilateral, with a threshold of 5%.
The practice of Reiki and back massage applications in support of pharmacological treatment is among the nursing initiatives and these practices increase the autonomy of the profession. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of Reiki and back massage on pain, analgesic use and vital signs in women who had undergone open abdominal hysterectomy. This was an experimental study with a single, blinded, pretest-posttest control group. The population of the study consisted of women who had abdominal hysterectomy in the Obstetrics Clinics at Gazi Yasargil Training and Research Hospital and Dicle University Hospital between July 2017 and February 2018. The patients were divided into three groups: Reiki, back massage and control, with 34 patients in each group. Reiki or back massage were applied for 20 minutes once a day to the patients in the Reiki and back massage groups.
Acute Pain is one of the most frequent chief complaints and the main reason for visiting the Emergency Department (ED). The acute pain in the ED is largely prevalent across the country with recent literature demonstrating that 61-91% of patients are admitted to the ED due to a variety of acute painful syndromes. There is a lack of good options for pain control in such settings.
Headaches affect over 50% of patients annually, with close to 4% of ED visits for headache. Most headaches managed in the ED are benign, with 90% of these headaches classified as tension, migraine, or cluster. At present, the satisfaction with ED treatment of headache is low, and despite the multitude of available medications, the evidence- based treatment options are often quite limited. There are over twenty different types of medications available to the ED clinicians for managing headache, many with different routes of administration (parenteral, intranasal, subcutaneous, and oral). Many of these medications are provided in so-called "headache cocktail", which varies based on the physician, institution, and patient preferences.