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Propofol Infusion Syndrome clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Propofol Infusion Syndrome.

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NCT ID: NCT04555980 Completed - Pain Syndrome Clinical Trials

Warm Patch Decrease Propofol Injection Pain

Start date: March 20, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Propofol causes injection pain is still a common clinical unsolved problem. Mixing a small amount of lidocaine with propofol or injecting lidocaine in advance can reduce the pain caused by propofol injection. Using an air warmer to warm the arm can also reduce the pain caused by propofol injection. Investors suspect that treatment with a warming patch (covering the injection site) can also reduce the pain caused by propofol injection.

NCT ID: NCT03420560 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Temperature Change, Body

A Warmer Temperature Decrease Propofol Injection Pain

Start date: February 28, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Propofol injection pain will be surfed by up to 70-80 percentage by the Patients who induced by propofol. Temperature of Operating room was set to a certain range in normal clinical practice, which is 22- 26 centigrade. Warm feeling will make skin vassal dilated and more blood will pass through to bring more heat out of our body. It had been reported that a bigger venous vessels will get less propofol injection pain. The investigators hypothesis that Patients who stayed in a warmer room temperature will surf less injection pain while compare to a normal setting room temperature.