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Active clinical trials for "Pain, Postoperative"

Results 801-810 of 3627

Methadone vs. Fentanyl Administration on Postoperative Pain Control in Pediatric Patients Undergoing...

Opioid UseUnspecified

The purpose of this study is to determine if methadone improves postoperative pain control in pediatric patient's undergoing cardiac surgery.

Terminated17 enrollment criteria

Prospective Observational Study on Postoperative Pain and Side Effect

Postoperative Pain

PAIN OUT is a multi-national, non-interventional registry and benchmark project, assessing and analysing clinical and patient-reported outcome data of postoperative pain.

Active9 enrollment criteria

On-Q Pump vs Epidural for Postoperative Pain Control in Children

Postoperative Pain

Open abdominal and pelvic surgery or thoracotomy (open chest surgery) is frequently performed for tumor excision in children. Post-operative pain management regimens are often at the discretions of the attending surgeon and may include opiods, patient administered analgesia (PCA), epidural catheters, subcutaneous analgesia catheters or NSAIDS to control incisional pain. Currently, both epidural or subcutaneous analgesia catheters (On-Q pumps) are commonly used for children undergoing these operations, at the discretion of the surgeon. There are no studies comparing these regimens in children. The purpose of this study is to compare postoperative pain control of the two strategies.

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Steroids in Total Knee Arthroplasty

Postoperative PainInflammation1 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate if the use of two small doses of intravenous (IV) steroids around the time of knee replacement surgery decrease a patient's pain or use of pain medication. The investigators will also determine if the subjects receiving the steroid will have better pain control and better postoperative outcomes after their surgery.

Terminated18 enrollment criteria

Fascia Iliaca Block for Post-Operative Pain Control After Total Hip Arthroplasty

Osteoarthritis of the Hip

This study evaluates post-operative pain management and narcotic consumption in patients receiving a fascia iliaca block with local anesthetic versus patients receiving fascia iliaca block with saline for total hip arthroplasty.

Terminated16 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Ketamine and Methadone on Postoperative Pain for Laminectomy

Laminectomy

The purpose of this research is to determine the pain-reducing effects of ketamine (Ketalar, an FDA-approved drug for anesthesia) and methadone (Dolophine, a long-acting narcotic) after lumbar laminectomy. The investigators would like to evaluate whether intraoperative use of both drugs may be able to provide better control of pain after lumbar surgery.

Terminated27 enrollment criteria

Use of Tapentadol Oral Solution for Pain After Surgery in Children From Newborn to Less Than 2 Years...

Moderate to Severe Acute Postoperative Pain

This is a multicenter, open-label (all people involved know the identity of the intervention), single dose trial to evaluate the pharmacokinetic (PK) profile (how drugs are absorbed in the body, how are they distributed within the body and how are they removed from the body over time) in children aged from birth to less than 2 years after a surgical procedure that routinely produces moderate to severe acute post-surgical pain. The trial will also evaluate the safety and tolerability of tapentadol oral solution in the population studied and the effect of tapentadol oral solution on pain.

Terminated47 enrollment criteria

Exparel vs. Standard Bupivicaine for Abdominoplasty

PainPostoperative

Background & study question: Strategies for post-operative pain control that make use of various different types of medicines are advantageous both for patient comfort and for minimizing the use of opioid pain medicines and their associated side effects, which include drowsiness, nausea, and vomiting. A key element of these strategies is wound injection with local anesthetic (numbing medicine) at the time of surgery. Local numbing procedures are used routinely in patients undergoing abdominoplasty (tummy tuck), most often with lidocaine or bupivacaine, which can last several hours. Multiple studies have shown that locally injected pain medicines achieve better pain control, less opioid use, and faster return to normal activities, such that the use of one of these local anesthetic medicines is the current standard of care. Exparel is an extended-release formulation of bupivacaine that can produce local pain relief for up to 72 hours. Studies have shown it to provide better post-operative pain control and decreased use of opioid medications when compared to patients who did not receive any local numbing agents. Exparel has been used successfully in a variety of surgical settings, including open colon surgery, laparoscopic gall bladder removal, abdominoplasty, and breast augmentation. Its effectiveness has by and large been established in comparison to no local anesthetic. In this study, we seek to investigate the benefit of Exparel compared to standard bupivacaine infiltration in patients undergoing abdominoplasty. Study design: Patients scheduled for abdominoplasty with the lead investigator will be offered inclusion in this study. Consenting patients will be randomly assigned to standard bupivacaine or Exparel by coin toss after their clinic visit. On the day of surgery, the only difference between patients assigned to one arm or the other is the local anesthetic used. The surgery itself and plan for general anesthesia will be similar. Both groups will have the same pain medicines available after surgery. Patients will be given a form on which to record twice-daily pain ratings and opioid narcotic needs for 3 days after surgery. For patients admitted after surgery, oral and IV narcotic use will be collected from their inpatient medical record. The primary outcome of interest is daily and cumulative pain scores through 3 days. A secondary endpoint is daily and total opioid use over 3 days. Additional measures include the time to first post-operative use of opioid medication and incidence of any adverse side effects.

Terminated4 enrollment criteria

Preventing pAIn With NMDA Antagonists - Steroids in Thoracoscopic lObectomy Procedures (PAIN-STOP)...

PainPostoperative

The objective of the PAIN-STOP trial is to assess the feasibility of a larger randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluating NMDA antagonists and IV steroids, as compared to placebo, in decreasing the chances of clinically significant persistent post-surgical pain (PPSP) after video assisted thoracoscopic surgeries (VATS). This is a multi-centre randomized, controlled clinical trial with a 2 x 2 factorial design. The pilot phase of the trial will recruit 48 patients and follow them for 3 months. Patients will be randomized to one of four groups: 1) NMDA active + Steroid placebo; 2) Steroid active + NMDA placebo; 3) NMDA active + Steroid active; 4) NMDA placebo + Steroid placebo.

Terminated13 enrollment criteria

Post-operative Emesis and Pain Outcomes After Cesarean Delivery

PainPostoperative5 more

Approximately 20% women who undergo cesarean delivery would suffer from severe post-operative pain, which may further increase their risks from developing postpartum depression. Predictive factors such as pre-operative pain, age and anxiety could significantly contribute to post-operative nausea and vomiting (PONV) and pain in general surgery, however little information is available with regards to cesarean delivery. The investigators would investigate the risk factors of causing post-operative emesis after cesarean delivery, and to reaffirm that there is a positive correlation between pain on local anesthetic injection, presence of mechanical temporal summation (MTS) and post-Cesarean pain scores.

Active7 enrollment criteria
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