Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Electrical Skin Conductance Monitoring as an Assessment of Post Operative Pain Scores
Pain has been defined as a subjective experience. Various pain assessment tools, (such as NRS) have been developed and validated to objectively monitor and treat pain. There are certain patient populations, in whom, the current pain assessment tools cannot be used effectively due to communication problems such as cognitively impaired patients. In the US, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) has made it mandatory to monitor and treat pain. In the absence of reliable pain assessment tools that would objectively measure pain, there is also risk of under treatment and overtreatment of pain that may lead to negative outcomes. Therefore, a monitor that is able to predict pain levels objectively, will help to achieve above goals. The investigators are using Skin Conductance Algesimeter (SCA) to measure pain by analyzing changes in skin conductance.
Pain was defined as the fifth vital sign, and assessment and treatment of pain were
introduced as a mandatory standard. This directive has improved pain management and patient
satisfaction, but it has also increased the incidence of opioid-related side effects
including respiratory depression with fatal outcomes. The most accepted pain assessment is
the patients' self-report of their pain. Various pain assessment tools, such as the numeric
rating scale (NRS), have been developed and validated. The self-report of pain is defined as
the gold standard even though it may be influenced by anxiety, level of education, employment
status, age and sex. The NRS is reported to be more clinically applicable than the visual
analogue scale (0-100mm) specifically in elderly and in patients on opioids.The current
self-report assessment tools cannot be used effectively in certain patient populations who
are unable to report their pain such as cognitively impaired patients, sedated patients and
children. In this group of patients, there is a risk of inadequate or overtreatment of pain
which in turn may lead to negative outcomes. When patients cannot report their pain,
observational and physiological parameters are used. Therefore, a monitor to objectively
assess the pain would be clinically valuable. An ideal monitor would be non-invasive,
fast-reacting, continuous (real-time), sensitive and specific to assess pain.
The Skin Conductance Algesimeter (SCA) measures skin sympathetic nerve activity mirrored by
variations in skin conductance responses (SCR) on the palmar side of the hand. Each time the
skin sympathetic nervous system is activated, the palmar and plantar sweat glands fill up
with sweat. Due to electrolytes present in sweat, the skin resistance decreases and the skin
conductance increases. The reabsorption of the sweat in the sweat glands reverses this
process, and leads to a decrease in skin conductance. SCR can be monitored by SCA and this
response is directly linked to skin sympathetic nerve activity. The number of SCR is a
measure of how often the skin sympathetic nerves fire. The numbers of SCR increase during
emotionally stressful stimuli like moderate-severe pain, and this is different than the
painless or mild pain conditions.
To examine how the SCR is influenced by stimuli other than pain postoperatively, it is
important that SCR is studied in the absence of moderate-severe pain.The goal of this study
is to evaluate the correlation of SCR with emotional stressors other than pain such as:
anxiety, nausea, and intellectual task performance. We hypothesized that SCR would not show a
significant positive correlation with emotional stressors other than pain, thereby will
increase the specificity of SCR as a viable physiological monitor for the assessment of
moderate-severe pain postoperatively.
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