View clinical trials related to Postoperative Pain Management.
Filter by:One of the main problems that faces children undergoing congenital cardiac surgery is posoperative pain management. PCAs (Patient Controlled Analgesia) and NCAs (Nurse Controlled Analgesia) are the main means of pain management here at NCH. In this study, the investigators will review the difference between different PCA and NCA modalities. Also, the investigators aim to find out if there are differences between age groups in terms of type of drug used, total drug used, side effects and length of use of the PCA or NCA.
To evaluate whether pregabalin and/or celecoxib could improve analgesic efficacy of intrathecal morphine for patients after total knee arthroplasty.
To prove pregabalin's efficacy and safety in Thai patients scheduled for arthroscopic ACL reconstruction
Ketamine affects postoperative pain when administered intravenously immediately before, during or at the end of surgical procedures. We assessed the effects of multiple and escalating doses of ketamine administered many hours before surgery on postoperative pain and analgesia consumption.
Given as a single perioperative injection, SKY0402 could provide adequate, continuous, and extended pain relief that could greatly simplify postoperative pain management, reduce the need for repeated administration, and minimize episodes of breakthrough pain.