View clinical trials related to Pelvic Pain.
Filter by:Women with endometriosis experience recurrent pelvic-perineal pain impairing the quality of life, among other things. Endometriosis-related pain negatively impacts the sexual, family and work life. Apart from the usual painkillers, the doctor's current therapeutic arsenal is limited to hormonal contraceptives and surgery. As endometriosis-related treatments do not currently address all of the patients' problems, developing a new, effective, non-pharmaceutical treatment would make it possible to relieve the pain of these women. Endocare treatment consists of visual and auditory therapeutic procedures for pelvic-perineal pain in patients with endometriosis. Moreover, as Endocare is not a pharmacological molecule but a digital therapy, it would not increase the consumption of pharmacological agents. An analgesic effect of Endocare lasting several hours on chronic pelvic-perineal pain associated with endometriosis is expected. The effects of the treatment will be compare to a digital control also integrated in a virtual reality headset identical to the one distributing Endocare allowing to maintain the blindness to the patients and the investigator on the treatment received.
Endometriosis-associated pelvic pain (EAPP) is common in endometriosis and pain control is an important goal of long-term management. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and oral contraception are the two first line therapies for endometriosis. High quality study about aspirin for the EAPP is absent. In this study, the investigators hypothesis that aspirin is effective in controlling EAPP. A randomized, open, and controlled study will be implemented. "participants with EAPP with visual Analogue Scale(VAS)>30 mm will be included and low dose aspirin(75mg/day) be prescribed. Yasmin(Drospirenone ethinyl estradiol tablet) will be used as positive control. The primary efficacy end points is the reduction of the pain score of EAPP at 24th week assessed with VAS score. Pelvic examination, sonography and blood test will be to performed to evaluate the lesion and coagulation function. The adverse event and medication compliance will be investigated. The aim of this study is to explore the efficacy and safety of low dose aspirin therapy in management of EAPP. This study will provide new options for the long-term management of endometriosis, which will help reduce the medical cost of endometriosis.
The EPPIC (Easing Pelvic Pain Interventions Clinical Research Program) study evaluates an ultra-brief, 4 session cognitive behavioral pain treatment transdiagnostic in design for urologic chronic pain syndrome (UCPPS) with clinical and practical advantages over existing behavioral therapies whose length and focus limits their adoption by clinicians and coverage for mechanistically similar comorbidities. A theoretically informed, practical, empirically grounded approach will systematically unpack CBT's working mechanisms, clarify for whom it works, ease dissemination, appeal to patients, providers, payers, and policy makers in the COVID-19 era favoring low resource intensity treatments, and reduce cost and inefficiencies associated with high intensity therapies whose complexity, length, and scarcity restricts uptake and impact.
Patients suffering pelvic persistent pain deal with significant pain that affects their quality of life. Often, conservative treatment interventions are scarce for these patients and are therefore not considered. Education has been developed as a relevant tool in the treatment of patients who suffer from chronic pain or any other pain processing alterations, and has the potential to become a powerfull treatment alternative.
Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS) is one of the most common diseases in urology, but its pathogenesis remains unclear and the effective therapy lacks. As a kind of chronic pain which the patients suffered for more than 3 months, CP/CPPS could be alleviated by acupuncture. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and higher magnetic field strengths could enable scientists to investigate the brain accurately and non-invasively during every stage of chronic pain.To avoid placebo effect, sham acupuncture would be also enrolled.Herein, by the utilization of fMRI in resting-state, we investigated the influence on patients' brain alterations after the patients accepted the treatment of acupuncture.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate if it is possible to use intravaginal high-density surface electromyography to guide Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) injection to treat pelvic floor muscle overactivity that complicates Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP).
Objectives: Gynecologic examination has been a concern for women. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of multimedia education on the fear of gynecologic examination. Material and Methods: This randomized controlled study will conducted with 80 voluntary patients. Participants will grouped as training group and control group. The multimedia-based information about vaginal examination is a video based patient education program. The anxiety levels/ scores of the patients will be assessed using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-S [state], STAI-T [trait]) and the Visual Analog Scale (VAS). The entire evaluation will be repeated before and after the examination.
To carry out real world research on the application of electrophysiology and other suitable technologies in the prevention and treatment of male diseases in medical institutions at all levels in Northwest China, and establish a database for the prevention and treatment of male diseases in Northwest China, so as to provide a basis for the formulation of guidelines or consensus on the application of electrophysiology for the prevention and treatment of male diseases in China.
This study is adressed to women with primary dysmenorrhea, it´s a gynecological disorder that is defined as colicky pain associated with menstruation and is located in the lower abdomen and in the lumbo-pelvic area. It appears between the first 8-72 hours and four days of the menstrual cycle and affects almost 85% of women, 30% of them severely. This study aims to demonstrate that osteopathic manual therapy is an effective therapeutic option in patients with primary dysmenorrhea. Another objective is to verify that osteopathic manual treatment provides an improvement in the intensity of pain, quality of life and a reduction in the consumption of medicines in these patients.
Photobiomodulation (PBM), evaluated in this study, will be delivered by a CE marked class IIa medical device (MILTA technology), composed of a panel that gathers 18 emitters. This is an innovative, alternative, soft technology, based on a cross action of LED light emission, a low intensity nanopulsed laser and a magnetic tunnel. The sessions last 10 minutes each, in total in the study two sessions will be delivered.