View clinical trials related to Postoperative Pain.
Filter by:The primary aim of our study was to use spinal anesthesia for unilateral inguinal hernia surgery and lumbar erector spina block supported by local infiltration anesthesia in terms of operation time, intraoperative hemodynamic data, motor block onset time, block termination time, analgesic need, discharge time, patient satisfaction, surgeon satisfaction. is to compare. Its second purpose is to observe nausea, vomiting, urinary retention, headache, chills, bleeding, wound infection.
This is a randomized double blinded non-inferiority study comparing the duration of pain relief when patients receive one of three doses of spinal morphine. Enrolled patients will be randomly assigned to receive either 50 mcg, 150 mcg, or 250 mcg. All patients will receive standardized postoperative care, including multimodal analgesia. The primary outcome will be the time until the patient requests additional opioid pain medications.
The main aim of this study is to compare thoracic paravertebral block and rhomboid block for postoperative analgesia and analgesic usage in thoracic surgeries.
Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery(VATS) is among the most common and disabling persistent pain and inflammation conditions, with increasing prevalence in the developed world, and affects women to a greater degree than men. And sleep disruption also remains a challenging problem in surgical settings. Postoperative sleep disturbances (POSD) are defined as changes in the sleep structure and quality of patients during the early stages after surgery, which are manifested as significantly shortened rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, prolonged awake time, and sleep fragmentation. Long-term POSD may increase the risk of postoperative delirium or cognitive dysfunction and delay recovery, thereby worsening the patient's physical condition. The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of sex differences on postoperative pain, inflammation, sleep quality and cognitive function among patients who have undergone video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery under general anesthesia.
An equivalent parallel randomized clinical trial was approved by the local University Committee of Ethics. 260 children with necrotic primary molars were allocated into 2 equal groups (82 children per group). The participants were allocated into two groups; group "1" teeth were instrumented with OneShape rotary system (Micro Mega, Besancon, France), and group "2" teeth were instrumented with WaveOne Gold reciprocating system (Dentsply Maillefer, Ballaigues, Switzerland). Postoperative pain was assessed using a four-point pain intensity rating scale adopted from Wong-Baker FACES (WBF) pain scale . The face scale consists of four faces with a brief title describing each face representing a scale from the first face (score 1), second face (score 2), third face (score 3), and forth face (score 4) 3. Postoperative pain was assessed at 6 six time intervals (at 6, 12, 24, 48, 72 hours and one-week).
this study was conducted to know the effect of intracanal cryotherapy on postoperative pain using two different irrigation systems to deliver the cold saline. method: A total of 75 patients presenting with a diagnosis of irreversible pulpitis with symptomatic apical periodontitis in single rooted teeth were included in the study and randomly divided into three groups (n=25) (i.e. Control group, cryotherapy group with needle irrigation and cryotherapy group with negative pressure irrigation system). After complete root canal cleaning and shaping, final irrigation was done with 2.5°c 0.9% physiological saline in cryotherapy groups with needle irrigation (NI) and negative pressure irrigation system (NPI) whereas in control group no additional irrigation was done. Root canal treatment was completed in single visit. Participants were asked through telephone to rate their postoperative pain intensity after root canal treatment by visual analogue scale from day 1 till day 7 on given proforma. two way repeated measures of ANOVA test were applied to know the mean difference between and among the groups.
Patient due for elective, ambulatory gynaecological laparoscopy will be screened peri-operatively for known and potential risk factors of postoperative pain and nausea/vomiting. The actual incidence and severity of pain and nausea/vomiting will be recorded during th 0-24 hr intervall after end of surgery, as well as the doses of all drugs, given for either prophylaxis or treatment
This study is designed to investigate the analgesic efficacy of pre-emptive ultrasound-guided midpoint transverse process to pleura (MTP) block for posterolateral thoracotomy in cardiothoracic surgeries.
Pain after root canal treatment is an important problem that affects the quality of life of patients. Common factors affecting the formation of pain after root canal treatment include insufficient root canal shaping, irrigation solution extrusion, intracanal medicament extrusion, hyperocclusion, missed canals, presence of pre-procedural pain, presence of periapical pathology, and extrusion of apical debris . It has been reported that the file systems and instrumentation technique used in root canal preparation affect apical extrusion, which is the main cause of postoperative pain . It has been reported that single-file systems introduced to the market to shorten root canal treatment time cause less postoperative pain than multi-file systems. However, there are different opinions about the effect of reciprocal and rotational file systems on postoperative pain. It has been reported that coronal flaring during root canal shaping facilitates apical access of instruments and irrigation solution. NiTi instruments generally tend to orient tissue debris coronally, coronal shaping can create a reservoir for collecting debris accumulated in the coronal portion of the root. Therefore, increasing the coronal space for debris reduces the amount of apically removed extrusion. However, single file systems do not have a coronal flaring file and canal preparation is completed with a single file. An increased amount of apical extrusion may occur due to insufficient coronal shaping during canal preparation using single-file systems. In this study, the effect of the use of coronal flaring file together with rotational and reciprocal single file systems on postoperative pain will be investigated, since there are different results about the effects of rotational and reciprocal file systems on postoperative pain, and although it has been reported that coronal flaring reduces apical extrusion, there is no study that determines the effect on postoperative pain. Thus, it is aimed to reduce the pain after root canal treatment and to have a more comfortable and painless process after the procedure.
The aim of this study is to clinically compare the efficacy of intraoral cryotherapy versus intracanal cryotherapy after single visit root canal therapy in lower molars with irreversible pulpitis and symptomatic apical periodontitis