Registry for Acute Pain Treatment
PainPostoperative1 moreThe German Network for acute pain management and Regional Anesthesia (NRA) is a multi-center, non-interventional registry and benchmark project, assessing and analysing clinical and patient-reported procedural and outcome data of systemic analgesia and regional anesthesia hosted by the German Society of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine (DGAI) and professional Society German Anesthetists (BDA)
Acute Pain Rate of Single Versus Two-visit Root Canal Treatment of Teeth With Necrotic Pulps
PainPostoperativeAim to compare acute pain rate after single-visit ortwo-visits treatment of teeth with necrotic pulp and apical periodontitis .90 teeth with a diagnosis of pulp necrosis and apical radiolucency at the apex.Working length was established with EAL and confirmed radiographically. Flex-R files were used to complete canal preparation. Level ofdiscomfort were recorded and cases with acute postoperative pain.
Pain Control Differences Between Oxycodone and Ibuprofen in Children With Isolated Forearm Injuries...
Forearm InjuriesPain2 moreChildren presenting to the Emergency Room with the chief complaint of forearm injury and/or pain will be randomized to receive oral Oxycodone or Ibuprofen to control pain.
Efficacy of Lidocaine Patch in Acute Musculoskeletal Pain in the Emergency Department
Acute Musculoskeletal DiseaseSprains5 moreThis study evaluates the addition of a lidocaine patch to ibuprofen in the treatment of acute musculoskeletal pains. Half of the participants will get only ibuprofen for their pain, while other half will receive lidocaine patch plus the ibuprofen. After addition of the pain medications, the participants will be followed for their pain scores and return visits.
Variable Perception of Cutaneous Stimulation
PainAcute3 morePerception of cutaneous sensory stimulation shows a large range of variability across multiple populations. Understanding this variability is critical to medical practice as interpretation of discomfort and pain is critical to diagnosis and treatment. Further, procedural medicine involves inflicting pain on patients in the form of injection of local anesthetic. Our protocol aims to determine how patients differentially interpret the non-noxious stimulation of vibration and the differences in perceiving anesthestic injection after the vibratory stimulus. We will explore how this ranges across all patients treated in a dermatological surgery out-patient setting. The goal is to identify which variables, such as age, gender, medical history, influence how sensation is interpreted.
A Trial Comparing Adductor Canal Catheter and Intraarticular Catheter Following Primary Total Knee...
Acute PainRegional Anesthesia MorbidityThe study is a prospective randomized controlled trial comparing intraarticular catheters and adductor canal catheters for postoperative analgesia following a primary Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA).
Does the Understanding of Placebo Mechanisms Compensate for the Loss of Efficacy Associated With...
Acute PainThe investigators are investigating whether, when given detailed information about underlying placebo mechanisms and pain, subjects will have a response similar to that of those subjected to a procedure in which they receive a conventional placebo treatment (associated with deception). STUDY DESIGN: This is a non-inferior parallel, controlled and randomized, single blind trial. POPULATION: The investigators will include in the study 126 subjects without known pathology. Participants will then be divided into 2 groups on a randomized basis. METHODOLOGY: Each subject will undergo three sessions of Cold Pressure Test (CPT), a cold pain stimulation method: calibration, condition of interest (conventional placebo or educated placebo) and control. The investigators' main judgment criterion is be the difference in pain intensity experienced on the visual analog scale between the CPT control and the CPT under the condition of interest. This study will allow the investigators to rule on the non-inferiority of an educated open label placebo compared to a conventional placebo in the context of an acute painful stimulation.
Pupillary Unrest in Ambient Light, and Relationship to Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression
Opioid; IntoxicationPerception Disturbance (Acute)4 moreVolunteers will receive a weight-based opioid (remifentanil) infusion for 10 minutes. In the first run, serial pupillary measurements (pupillary unrest, pupil diameter) will be taken at baseline, and at 2.5-minute intervals during the infusion and a 25-minute recovery period afterwards. After a washout period, the experiment will be repeated in each subject (second run). The two runs differ only by presence versus absence of verbal interaction.
Cold Press Test and Post Operative Pain Relationship
Post-operative PainAcute1 moreThe goal of this clinical trial is to investigate whether it is possible to get a preliminary idea about the postoperative pain in the patient with the results of a practical cold press test applied to American Society of Anesthesiologists(ASA) 1 and 2, healthy, male patients aged 16-35 before extraction of the lower third molar. The main question it aims to answer are: • Can post-operative pain be predicted with an cold test that can be applied more practically than conventional quantitative sensory tests applied preoperatively? Participants will need to keep their hands on ice for 240 seconds prior to third molar surgery. When they take their hands off the ice, they will be asked to describe their pain on the visual analog scale. After the operation, the participants are required to mark whether they use painkillers every 8 hours in their pain follow-up forms and the pain they feel according to the visual analog scale. Depending on the endurance time of the participants to keep their hands on the ice; Two different groups were determined as less than 240 sec and equal to 240 sec. The pain scores and the amount of painkiller use between these two groups were compared with each other.
Bupivacaine vs Oxybuprocaine Topical Anesthesia in IVI
PainAcutecomparing two local anaesthetic agents, Bupivacaine 0.5% versus Oxybuprocaine used topically to provide surface anaesthesia before IVI procedures.