View clinical trials related to Post-operative Pain.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the quality of postoperative analgesia in a group of obese patients schedule to bariatric surgery under TIVA Opiod-free after to receive lidocaine and ketamine perfusion. The main question it aims to answer are: How lidocaine and ketamine perfusion during recovery period does impact over morphine consumption on the following 48 hours after surgery? All participants will receive total intravenous anesthesia and, at the end of the surgery, they will be divided in two groups, group A: placebo and, group B: with postoperative lidocaine and ketamine perfusion. Our hypothesis is ketamine and lidocaine are a good alternative to decrease the use of morphine in obese patients.
The investigator's aim in this study was to evaluate the preoperative anxiety and the pain felt during the operation due to exposure to green light. For this purpose, the participants will wear green or translucent glasses before the operation. The investigator will evaluate the patient's anxiety change and the pain she/he feels during the procedure.
- compare the safety and efficacy of ultrasound-guided supraclavicular block in addition to general anesthesia in pediatric patients undergoing upper limb superficialization of arteriovenous fistula for hemodialysis. - compare the amount of analgesic consumption as well as vasodilatation of upper limb blood vessels and its implications on the vascular anastomosis.
Anorectal problems, such as hemorrhoids, fistula, fissures, Etc., often require surgical treatment. Patients often have postoperative pain after these surgeries, which increases discomfort and hospital length of stay. The efficacy of oral non-opioids in the treatment of such pain is poor. Hydromorphone is an opioid analgesic commonly used orally or intravenously for postoperative pain management. We designed this trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of intrathecal (delivery directly to the spinal cord during spinal anesthesia) single dose hydromorphone versus intrathecal placebo in treating postoperative pain among human subjects after anorectal surgery, but also the recovery of postoperative motor capacity in these human subjects.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the investigators can precisely predict how much pain medication the subjects will need after surgery using a special calculator that was developed for this purpose.
This study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of desensitizing agent Propolis, after an in -office vital tooth bleaching and to compare its desensitizing effect to traditionally used desensitizing agent fluoride varnish. Methods: Considering the inclusion and exclusion criteria 90 patients will be selected at the OPD of Dow University of Health Sciences Ojha campus with mild to moderate discoloration and randomly divided in to three groups group A control group (fluoride varnish) group B Propolis and group C Propolis mixed with bleaching agent. After performing the bleaching procedure respective desensitizing agent was applied to each group for 10 minutes. Visual analogue scale and Schiff's scale were used to assess the sensitivity after completion of treatment. Subjective non stimulated assessment of sensitivity was done by using the visual analogue scale from day 1 till day 7 on given Performa and Objective stimulated assessment of sensitivity was done at the dental office on day 1 right after the procedure and at day 7 on follow-up after one week. Kruskal-Wallis test was applied to check median pain score and sensitivity difference between and among the groups. Mann-Whitney U test was applied to check further pairwise comparison between the groups.
Uncontrolled postoperative pain after inguinal hernia repair increases the incidence of postoperative complications.
This randomized, controlled study is designed to assess the quality of analgesia provided by ultrasound-guided bilateral pectointercostal facial block in children undergoing cardiac surgery via midline sternotomy.
A double-blind randomized control study to compare the efficacy of dexmedetomidine versus ketamine as an adjuvant in combination with bupivacaine ultrasound-guided ESP block in patients scheduled for cardiothoracic surgeries with thoracotomy incision.
Pharmacogenomics (PGx) is the study of how genes affect a person's response to drugs. PGx testing for certain genes can help predict the risk of side effects or therapeutic failure from analgesics. Testing is not regularly performed in clinical practice due to long wait times for results and challenges with integrating test results in the electronic health record. Investigators leading this study hope to find out if providing surgeons with the ability to order a PGx test and electronically receive results with dosing recommendations will increase the use of these tests to guide analgesic choice and improve patient outcomes. This is a prospective, two-arm randomized implementation study. Eligible participants will be randomly assigned to receive genotype-guided analgesic selection (intervention arm) or usual care (control arm). Both cohorts will undergo pharmacogenetic testing at the time of consenting. The investigators will primarily measure the feasibility of using this test to guide analgesic selection.