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Active clinical trials for "Pain, Postoperative"

Results 841-850 of 3627

The Effect of Abdominal Binder Use on Postoperative Pain and Mobility in Patients Undergoing Pelvic...

Pelvic Organ ProlapseAbdominal Surgery2 more

To determine the effect of post-operative abdominal binder usage on total narcotic usage after undergoing surgery. To determine if abdominal binder usage results in decreased visual analog scale (VAS) pain scores and shorter time to first ambulation post operatively.

Terminated12 enrollment criteria

Virtual Reality for Post Operative Pain Management After Total Knee Arthroplasty

Virtual RealityPain4 more

Virtual reality has been used for acute pain management (burn patients) with positive results. Hypnosis has known beneficial effects on patients in the peri-operative setting. The investigators are combining both by giving a virtual reality hypnosis (VRH) session to the patients during a known painful post-operative moment. (physiotherapy) It is the investigator intention to compare pain after physiotherapy during the first 3 days after a total knee arthroplasty, between 2 groups. One group , the VR group gets standard treatment with VRH and the second, the sham group, gets standard treatment with a sham VR session.

Terminated14 enrollment criteria

Study to Evaluate Iovera®° in Adult Patients Undergoing Total Knee Arthroplasty

Post-Operative Pain Management

Primary objective: The primary objective of this study is to evaluate postsurgical pain control, after presurgical iovera° treatment plus EXPAREL® and standardized multimodal therapy compared with presurgical sham iovera° treatment plus EXPAREL and standardized multimodal therapy in subjects undergoing primary unilateral total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Secondary objectives: The secondary objectives of this study are to compare postsurgical pain control or postsurgical total opioid consumption, opioid-free status, physical function, sleep quality, and safety of presurgical iovera° treatment plus EXPAREL and standardized multimodal therapy with presurgical sham iovera° treatment plus EXPAREL and standardized multimodal therapy, in subjects undergoing primary unilateral TKA

Terminated37 enrollment criteria

ESP vs QL for Total Abdominal Hysterectomy

Postoperative Pain

Patients undergoing open total abdominal hysterectomy (n=82) at Parkland Memorial Hospital will be randomized into one of two groups to receive either ultrasound-guided bilateral ESP block with liposomal bupivacaine (Group 1) or ultrasound-guided bilateral QL block with liposomal bupivacaine (Group 2) for postoperative pain management. The remaining aspect of perioperative care, including the general anesthetic technique and postoperative care will be standardized and will be similar for all patients. The duration of the involvement in the study will be until 72 hours postoperatively. Anesthesia providers will identify potential subjects during their Pre-Anesthesia Evaluation Clinic visit and/or Day Surgery Unit pre-anesthetic assessment. There will be no incentive or payment to the patients. Patients in Group 1 will receive ultrasound-guided bilateral ESP block in the preoperative holding area prior to surgery. Patients in Group 2 will receive ultrasound-guided QL block in the preoperative holding area prior to surgery. All patients will have general anesthesia per previously established Parkland Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols. Postoperatively, patients in both Groups will receive acetaminophen 1000 mg orally every 8 hours, meloxicam 15 mg orally every 24 hours, and immediate-release oxycodone 5 - 10mg orally every 4 hours as needed for breakthrough pain. The postoperative analgesia will be documented using the Numeric Rating Scale (0-10 scale where 0=no pain and 10=worst pain). In addition, total opioid dose over the 72-hours study period will be documented. Postoperative nausea will be measured using a categorical scoring system (none=0, mild=1, moderate=2, severe=3) and episodes of vomiting will be documented. Rescue anti-emetics will be given to any patient who complains of nausea and/or vomiting. All variables will be assessed at 4, 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours, postoperatively by an investigator blinded to group allocation.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of Intrathecal Oxytocin to Speed Recovery After Hip Surgery

Postoperative Pain

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of intrathecal oxytocin on speed of reduction in pain for the first 60 days after hip surgery.

Terminated6 enrollment criteria

Study of SyB P-1501 (Fentanyl HCI) for Treatment of Postoperative Pain

Postoperative Pain

This is a Phase 3 clinical trial to compare the safety and efficacy of SyB P-1501 with the SyB P-1501 placebo for the management of the first 24 hours of post-operative pain.

Terminated25 enrollment criteria

Peripheral Nerve Blocks for Major Lower Extremity Amputations

Postoperative Pain

This study will be a double-blinded randomized controlled trial analyzing all patients who will undergo major lower extremity amputations by the vascular surgery service at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Fresno between July 2017 and June 2018 to determine if regional nerve blocks (sciatic and femoral) have any effect on postoperative pain control, narcotic requirements, and length of stay compared with standard post-operative narcotic regimens.

Terminated2 enrollment criteria

Intraoperative Methadone Administration for Improved Pain Control in Spinal Fusion Patients

PainPostoperative

Methadone has several advantages over standard narcotic medications, especially when considering use after a typically painful surgery such as lumbar fusion. Methadone is low cost, has a long half-life, has a convenient dosing schedule, has excellent oral bioavailability, and demonstrates slow onset to withdrawal. The literature comparing methadone to more commonly used post-operative narcotics demonstrates that it manages pain better, sustains consistent plasma concentrations, decreases overall narcotic requirement, results in no additional adverse events, and is safe, even in children, across several studies. Since the standard of care is non-methadone narcotic usage to manage the significant pain of complex spinal surgery cases, it is understandable that methadone could be a desirable alternative to promote sustained pain control and early ambulation in these patients. The goal of this study is to compare the effect of a single dose of methadone administered intraoperatively in enrolled spinal fusion patients to their historical controls given fentanyl and morphine, and determine if more sustained pain control during the first few days after surgery provides a better subjective experience for the patient with less pain, which allows them to ambulate and leave the hospital sooner than patients given a standard regimen.

Terminated20 enrollment criteria

Transversus Abdominis Plane Block for Pain Relieve in Children Undergoing Groin Surgery

Postoperative PainReaction; Anesthesia

For surgery in the region of the lower abdominal wall the administration of local anesthetic drugs in the epidural space via the caudal route is the preferentially used technique since several decades. The transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block features the advantages of a peripheral nerve blockade. The aim of this study is to evaluate potential differences in the effectiveness of postoperative analgesia and to test the hypotheses that the duration of pain relieve ist prolonged after a TAP block when compared with an epidural technique.

Terminated4 enrollment criteria

Postoperative Pain Control After Hip Hemiarthroplasty: Intrathecal Morphine vs Periarticular Infiltration...

Femoral Neck Fracture

Falls are a common problem in elderly people which they have to receive the operation. Hemiarthroplasty is one of the common orthopedics operations. The prompt operation and good pain control will provide the good recovery and outcome. The investigators compare the efficacy of postoperative pain control between Intrathecal morphine 0.1 milligrams (mg.) with the local infiltration of 0.25% Bupivacaine for 20 milliliters (ml.) in patients received hip hemiarthroplasty under spinal anesthesia.

Terminated11 enrollment criteria
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