View clinical trials related to Post-operative Pain.
Filter by:This randomized trial evaluates an intervention to minimize use of opioids following total hip and total knee replacement. Half the participants will receive an intervention (mailed educational materials, followed by a pharmacist call), and half will receive usual care.
This is a research study of SABER® -Bupivacaine, an experimental medication designed to reduce pain for up to 3 days after surgery. Given once by the surgeon at the end of surgery, SABER® - Bupivacaine delivers a locally-acting pain reliever directly to the surgical wound. The purpose of this study is to measure how well it works in reducing pain after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (surgery to remove the gall bladder) and to investigate the safety of SABER®-Bupivacaine (its side effects).
The aim of the study is to determine the effectiveness of serratus place block in the control of post-operative pain following mastectomy. The investigators will compare one group of patients receiving serratus plane block and wound infiltration to a control group receiving a saline injection into serratus anterior and wound infiltration with local anaesthetic only. The investigators will compare our results to the National Mastectomy and Breast Reconstruction Audit's reported rate of 6.2% of patients reporting severe pain following mastectomy to see if there is an improvement of the national standard. In the serratus block group, the investigators expect a 50% decrease in the number of patients who report severe pain day one post operatively.
A Comparison Between Lidocaine-Prilocaine Cream (EMLA) Application And wound Infiltration with Lidocaine For Post Caesarean Section Pain Relief : A Randomized Controlled Trial.
The purpose of this study is to improve IV-Patient Controlled Analgesia (IV-PCA) technique for postoperative analgesia. Investigators are comparing between patient re-education and the background morphine infusion among patients who fail to achieve satisfactory analgesia using IV-PCA Morphine after laparotomy.
VVZ-149 is a novel analgesic drug candidate that shows a potential analgesic activity inhibiting GlyT2 and 5HT2A simultaneously. These target receptors have been known to play important roles in induction and transmission of pain signals. There have been many efforts to develop selective drugs to treat pain, but usually unsuccessful due to the lack of efficacy or limitations of single-target approach for new drug discovery. VVZ-149 is expected to be a dual-target drug, demonstrated having a potential synergism between GlyT2 and 5HT2A to maximize an antinociceptive effect in the in vivo animal models. In Phase 1 conducted among healthy subjects, safety and tolerability were confirmed. Phase 2 was designed as a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the analgesic drug VVZ-149 injection.
A randomized double blind control trial to investigate the safety and efficacy of subcutaneous ketamine for control of post operative pain in low resource settings.
The purpose of this Phase 2 study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of an analgesic drug candidate, VVZ-149 Injections. The study is designed as randomized, double-blind, parallel, placebo-controlled study.
Patient will have usual appendectomy surgery with an injection of local or saline at incision site either before or after the incision at random. The clinical hypothesis of this trial is that pediatric patients who undergo a local anesthetic pre-incisional and/or post-incisional will reduce the amount of postoperative pain and therefore reduce the amount of analgesics required to keep the patient satisfied. Primary: To determine if local anesthetic reduces postoperative pain. Secondary: To assess the timing of local anesthetic injection affects postoperative pain.
Pain is a subjective sensation which in children can only be experienced and most times not expressed. Pain management in children thus falls short of their adult counterparts. Acute pain of surgery causes significant suffering and stress. In children, pain management has lagged behind because of the belief that children's pain receptors are less well developed than their adult counterparts. However this has been proven to be false as development of pain receptors has been shown by 26th week of gestation. Caudal analgesia with plain bupivacaine has been used for effective post operative analgesia. Resources sometimes limit acquisition of additives to bupivacaine to be delivered into the intrathecal space. The fear of pharmacological adverse effects of opioids has restricted their use especially among the anesthesia officers who deliver the bulk of anesthesia services in Uganda and this has led to poor pain management in pediatric populations Mulago national referral hospital is a resource limited centre with regards to human resource, equipment and drugs. This is mainly due to lack of sufficient funds and large volume of patients with the nursing staff being overwhelmed by the patient capacity. Drug administration is often not done on time and continuous assessment of pain scores in children is not adequate resulting in poor post operative pain management. Pain control thus will depend on analgesia provided at the time of operation creating a need for prolonged pain control measures. Studies done have compared intravenous morphine administration versus caudal analgesia and are mostly focused of sub umbilical surgery however none has been done in our setting. Bupivacaine and morphine are now more readily available and can be used for post operative analgesia. However studies on the timing to the next analgesic requirement have not been compared/done in Mulago national referral hospital.