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Vascular Access Site Pain clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Vascular Access Site Pain.

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NCT ID: NCT04561596 Completed - Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trials

Virtually Augmented Self Hypnosis in Peripheral Vascular Interventions

Start date: September 23, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of our study is to compare patients anxiety and pain during percutaneous vascular interventions with and without virtual reality autohypnosis.

NCT ID: NCT04358094 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Vascular Access Site Pain

Conversational Hypnosis for Peripherical Veinous Access (HYPNACESS)

HYPNACESS
Start date: May 4, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The peripherical veinous catheterization is required for anesthesia. However, it's a painful procedure and causes stress or even phobia. Hypnosis can be seen as an interesting tool. Conversational hypnosis needs no training. It is used by script, which makes it easier. The working hypothesis for study is that the conversational hypnosia script reduces pain during the set up of peripherical veinous access. The main objective is the analgesia assessment of conversational hypnosis script for peripherical veinous catheter set up versus standard script in operating room. A nurse anesthetist is reading the conversational script or standard script during the procedure. The nurse anesthetist is untrained for hypnosis. The secondary objective are the level of anxiety, patient satisfaction within the perioperative period (EVAN G questionnaire), the heart rate and the evaluation how nurse anesthetist feels about using the script after each use.