View clinical trials related to Postoperative Pain Relief.
Filter by:Sixty female non-smoker patients, aged 18-50 years and ASA I and II undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy under general anesthesia were included in this randomized controlled double-blind study. Patients were randomly divided into 3 groups 20 each, C group patients received transdermal placebo patch, TDN group (15 mg/16 h) and TDM group (7 mg/8h). Assessment of postoperative pain, sedation, hemodynamic variables such as HR and MAP, postoperative monitoring of arterial SpO2 and side effects (e.g. nausea, vomiting, pruritis, respiratory depression and hemodynamic instability) were done 30 minutes, 1, 2, 6 and 12 hours postoperatively. Postoperative Patient's and Surgeons' satisfaction, Intraoperative bleeding and plasma cortisol (µg / dl) 2 hours postoperatively were also assessed.
Abdominal surgery causes severe postoperative pain. Multi-modal pain therapy is usually applied but there is no perfect choice. It depends on physician's skill and situation. The best regimen is patient-controlled analgesia, but it requires an expensive equipment. Transdermal fentanyl patch, usually used in chronic pain relief, can steadily release fentanyl into blood stream for 72 hours, but it has slow onset of 12 hours. Hypothesis: If Transdermal fentanyl patch is applied 10-12 hours before surgery, it may provide good analgesia for 72 hours.