View clinical trials related to Post-operative Pain.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to see if Exparel, used intraoperatively by injecting at the surgical site, followed by a Supraclavicular nerve block with bupivacaine in the recovery room, will provide better pain scores for patients at 24 and 48 hours post operatively than, 1)Bupivacaine Hydrochloride (HCL) injection at the surgical site, with a supraclavicular block in Post-anesthesia care unit(PACU), or 2)a supraclavicular block in PACU without any kind of injection at the surgical site.
This study is investigating whether administration of acetaminophen the day before surgery improves post operative pain following minimally invasive hysterectomy. Patients will receive either acetaminophen or placebo to take twice per day the day prior to their scheduled surgery. The morning of surgery all participants will receive oral acetaminophen at least 30 minutes prior to surgery. The investigators will examine whether there is a difference in post operative pain between the two groups.
This study will evaluate the ability of dexamethasone to enhance labor epidurals when administered as an adjunct to local anesthetics via an epidural catheter. Patients undergoing elective cesarean sections will be randomized into three groups, each receiving the same combined spinal epidural (CSE). At surgical closure, Group 1 will receive 10cc bupivacaine 0.0625%, Group 2 will receive 10cc bupivacaine 0.0625% +4mg dexamethasone, and Group 3 will receive 10cc bupivacaine 0.0625% + 8mg dexamethasone (4mg). VAS, sedation, nausea, and satisfaction scoring will be measured on patient follow-up to compare the outcomes of the different treatment groups.
Ventral hernia repair leads to more than expected pain. This is thought to be secondary to nerve pain at the lateral transfixion sutures. Systemic lidocaine given pre-op has in other situations decreased neurogenic pain. This study will examine its effects on pain experienced after ventral hernia repair.
This study is a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effect of a simple counseling intervention on post-operative narcotic requirements, with the hypothesis that women receiving this intervention will use fewer narcotics for pain management following cesarean section.
Surgical extraction of third molars is one of the most common outpatient procedures performed by oral surgeons. The prescription of postoperative narcotic and NSAID analgesics is the standard of care practice to relieve symptoms of pain, swelling, and trismus after these procedures. The majority of these patients do not return for follow up unless they experience a problem. There is limited data on whether the patients use the narcotics as directed and what is their practice of disposal of the remaining medications that were not consumed. In this research the effectiveness of postop analgesic consumption, analgesic disposal practice, pain control, and patient satisfaction will be compared between patients who are randomized to the intervention group who will use a developed mobile application and a control group who will not use the mobile app.
HYPOTHESIS Serratus Anterior Muscle Plane Block (SPB) is as effective as thoracic paravertebral block (PVB) for acute pain control after unilateral mastectomies. SPECIFIC AIMS Primary aim: To evaluate the efficacy of SPB block vs thoracic PVB for acute pain control in patients undergoing unilateral mastectomy Secondary aim To compare the onset and duration of block and dermatomes blocked in both groups To compare the need of post-operative rescue analgesia in both groups. To compare the development of chronic incisional pain in both groups Functional outcome with respect to daily activities.
This study is designed to evaluate the use of bupivacaine liposome 1.3% compared bupivacaine 0.5% in pain control in post-operative laparoscopic bariatric surgery patient The purpose of this study is to evaluate two local anesthetics and determine if there is an advantage of administering one medication compared over the other. The intent is show that one local anesthetic.allows for improved pain control as per the pain scale ratings of the test subjects.
Patients that are to undergo isolated meniscectomy will be randomized to 2 cohorts: one will take the FDA recommended dose of acetominophen (1000mg) 24hrs before surgery, one will be given a similarly looking placebo pill. A multitude of post-op variables will be included, mainly pain scores and morphine equivalent doses at different time points.
This randomized phase IV trial studies how well the continuous infusion of ropivacaine hydrochloride works in reducing pain after surgery in patients with bladder cancer. Ropivacaine hydrochloride is an anesthetic drug used to decrease pain by numbing an area of the body without putting the patient to sleep. Continuous infusion of ropivacaine hydrochloride may reduce pain and improve the quality of life for patients after bladder surgery.