Postoperative Pain in Children Aged From 3 to 5 Years Following Full Mouth Dental Rehabilitation...
Post-operative Painthe purpose of this study is monitoring Postoperative pain in Children Aged from 3 to 5 years following Full mouth Dental Rehabilitation under General Anesthesia
Prediction of Persistent Postsurgical Pain After Video-assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS)
PainPostoperativeProspective cohort study of factors predisposing to persistent post surgical pain after video-assisted thoracic surgery
A Survey on Postoperative Pain (POP) Experience in Asian Patients.
Postoperative PainPain management is becoming an important ethical responsibility of the medical profession and a focus of the health care system. However, there are limited literature evaluate the postoperative pain experience and management in our local setting.
Post-Operative Pain After Recovery in Thoracic Surgery
Neuropathic PainPost Operative Pain1 morePersistent pain after surgery has significant physical and mental consequences for the patient, as well as a significant economic impact on health systems. Neuropathic pain is caused by direct or indirect damage to the somatosensitive system. In thoracic surgery, chronic neuropathic pain is represented by Post-Thoracotomic Pain Syndrome (PTPS), defined as recurrent or persistent pain in the thoracotomy scar site that persists for more than 3-6 months. Currently, in literature, the prevalence of PTPS is extremely variable. This prospective observational study aims to assess the incidence of pain in the weeks and months following surgery and to assess whether and how the presence of painful symptoms changes the patient's quality of life.
Short and Long-term Effects of Surgical Repair of Pectus Deformities
PainPostoperativeA large number of institutions have reported their early results with minimally invasive repair of pectus excavatum and open repair of pectus carinatum, but only few have addressed the outcomes relevant to the concerns of the patients and even fewer have reported long-term results following bar removal. Even fewer studies have investigated the prevalence and characteristics of long term persistent post-surgical pain following surgical repair of pectus deformities. The reasons as to why acute postoperative pain in some patients persists and becomes chronic whereas in others the pain dies down shortly after wound healing are largely unknown, and why some patients complain of loss of sensibility in wide regions of their chest following surgery also remains unclear.
Persistent Postoperative Pain After Major Emergency Abdominal Surgery
Chronic Postoperative PainPerioperative pain is one of the most significant complaints and problems for patients undergoing major open surgery. Pain after surgery carry an abundance of consequences such as reduced mobilization, reduced nutrition intake, reduced pulmonary capacity and increased risk of complications and length of hospitalization. The literature does not supply much information on short- or longer-term outcomes of pain treatment for emergency surgery. The investigators know that for planned surgery in general around 10-50 percentage suffer from persistent postoperative pain. It is therefore important to follow-up on the longer-term outcomes after the standardized analgesic pain treatment. Based on a predefined patient group called OMEGA (Optimizing Major EMergency Abdominal surgery) the investigators hypothesize that OMEGA patients will present a significant incidence rate of patients with persistent postoperative pain and/or continued opioid/non-opioid usage. Therefore this study is to investigate the incidence of prolonged postoperative pain and opioid/non-opioid consumption in OMEGA patients at 3 month after major emergency abdominal surgery.
Comparison of Postoperative Pain Management in Patients Undergoing Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery...
Postoperative PainThis is a retrospective study to compare postoperative pain intensity in patients going laparoscopic colorectal surgery with Enhanced Recovery after Surgery (ERAS), without ERAS and open colorectal surgery.
Does Ice Cream Help With Post-tonsillectomy Pain
TonsillitisPostoperative Pain1 moreTonsillectomy is one of the most performed procedures in childhood, which carries with it certain postoperative problems, such as the pain of the operated area. Sickness greatly impairs the quality of life in the postoperative period and further reduces food and fluid intake in children, which in turn causes prolonged recovery after surgery. The impact of cooling oropharynx in the form of ice cream consumption as a form of cryotherapy could help reduce the pain, reduce the use of oral analgesic therapy and help in faster recovery after surgery. Research goal: The aim of the study is to determine whether the consumption of ice cream, as a form of cryotherapy, influences the rate of postoperative recovery after tonsillectomy and the consumption of oral analgesics in children. The study was designed as a prospective, randomized, parallel-group, unmasked, and longitudinal study enroling 100 children undergoing tonsillectomy in a tertiary referral center. Of those children, 60 will consume the same ice cream (a combination of vanilla and chocolate as universally acceptable flavors) twice daily, morning and evening, for two weeks after surgery. 40 children will not consume ice cream during the stated period. Parents will be given a questionnaire with a validated VAS Wong-Baker FACES scale (Visual - Analogue - Scale) used by the Zagreb Pediatric Disease Clinic to be completed at home based on communication with the child and containing information on a visual-analogue subjective pain experience in children every morning after eating ice cream and the amount of analgesics the children received during the first two weeks after surgery. There will also be a record of the days when children began to consume food and drink in the same range and quality as before surgery.
The Influence of Different Anesthesia on Acute and Chronic Postsurgical Pain After Thoracic Surgery...
Acute PainChronic Postsurgical PainThis study would compare acute and chronic postsurgical pain in patients underwent thoracic surgery with different anesthesia and analgesia methods, and explore the influencing factors.
Regional Anesthesia for Thoracoscopic Surgery
Postoperative PainAim of the study is to evaluate different regional anesthesia regimes for thoracoscopic surgery to evaluate their efficiency in (postoperative) pain control. Three regional anesthesia forms are evaluated: thoracic epidural anesthesia, (ultrasound-guided) serratus-anterior-plane-block an local infiltration with local anesthetic at the site of performing the thoracoscopy.