The Effect of Stress Ball Use on Procedural Pain Caused by Subcutaneous Injection in Orthopedic...
Misadventure During Injection / VaccinationRandomization in the study will be done by the researchers with the Randomizer Research program. The research will be carried out between 01.01.2023 and 01.10.2023 with the participation of 134 patients who were hospitalized in the postoperative period at Trakya University Health Research and Application Center Orthopedics and Traumatology Service and participated voluntarily. In the study, in the G.Power 3.1.9.4 program, the effect size was 0.5, the confidence level was 95%, and the power was 80%, and the minimum sample size to be reached was 134 patients (67 experiments- 67 controls), each group consisting of 67 people. Before the study, all patients will be informed by the researchers, and written consent will be obtained from the patients who volunteered to participate in the study. All patients will be asked the questions in the Patient Information Form and the pretest Vizuel Analog Scala (VAS) scores in the Patient follow-up form will be recorded before the subcutaneous (SC) injection application. The patients in the experimental group will be given a stress ball before the SC injection during the routine daytime treatment of the ward at 10:00. The patient will be asked to squeeze the stress ball with his hand on the opposite extremity of the upper extremity where SC injection was applied, counting to five, and then to relax his hand. The level of pain in the area where SC was applied will be evaluated with VAS. For the patients in the control group, 0.4 ml of LMWH will be administered by the nurse in the routine daytime treatment of the service at 10:00, according to the doctor's request. During the patient's drug administration and 2 minutes after the application. The level of pain in the area where SC was applied will be evaluated with VAS.
Impact of Virtual Reality in Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
Virtual RealityPediatrics3 moreThis pilot study will be testing the feasibility of medical hypnosis through virtual reality during invasive médical procédures in children with cancer. Patients age from 7 to under 18 years whose treatement protocols required a lumbure puncture and a chemotherapy by implantable venous access will be randomly assigned to virtual reality or treatement as usual (nitrous oxide, anxiolytics, opioid analgesics, psychotropic and benzodiazepine). We expect the same benefit by using VR as usual intervention.
VR-PAT for Pain and Anxiety Management During Pediatric Dermatologic Laser Procedures
Procedural AnxietyProcedural PainThis study will assess the feasibility and efficacy of our Virtual Reality Pain Alleviation Therapy (VR-PAT) for pain management during pediatric and young adult outpatient laser procedures and evaluate the impact of VR use on reducing anxiety in patients undergoing dermatologic laser procedures. The investigators hypothesize that patients using VR-PAT will report less pain and anxiety during the laser procedure than patients who do not play the game.
Neonatal Pain Management and Pain Monitoring Using New Methods
PainAcute2 moreThe aim of this randomized controlled study with crossover design is to examine the effectiveness of mother-driven interventions, skin-to-skin contact (SSC) and recorded mother's heartbeats as sound and vibration (MHB), compared to oral glucose in relieving neonatal acute pain related to heel lance as a painful procedure. The effectiveness of interventions will be assessed using validated pain scales (PIPP-R and NIAPAS), changes in sensory cortex activation (near-infrared spectroscopy, NIRS) and changes in physiological indicators (oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiratory rate). The secondary objectives will include evaluating the effectiveness of interventions in relation to infant recovery and evaluating the use of NIRS monitoring in relation to neonatal pain assessment scales.
Offset Mechanisms in Evaluation of Lumbar Medial Branch Blocks
PainChronic4 moreThis study examines the relationship between central nervous system (CNS) mechanisms of pain inhibition and the pain relief that occurs following a lumbar medial branch block (MBB).
Two Approaches in Enhancing the Efficacy of Inferior Alveolar Nerve Block During Treatment of Mandibular...
PainProceduralThe study is designed as a randomized parallel controlled trial with three groups. Participants aged above 18 years with the first permanent molars with symptomatic signs of irreversible pulpitis will be randomly assigned into 3 groups. The first group (experimental group) will be injected with 4% articaine 1:100.000 epinephrine (inferior alveolar nerve block) will be anesthetized using 4% articaine 1:100.000 plus cryotherapy application, and the second group (experimental group) will be anaesthetised with IANB plus buccal infiltration. For the third group (control group), the mandibular molars will be anaesthetized using epinephrine using the inferior alveolar nerve block.
Lignocaine Only Versus Lignocaine Plus Magnesium Sulphate for Pain Relief After Episiotomy.
Episiotomy WoundPain1 moreTrauma to perineal area is one of common problems faced by obstetricians affecting physical, social and mental wellbeing of patients. During labor, surgical incision to perineum (episiotomy) is done to facilitate delivery of fetus. Episiotomy is associated with complication such as hemorrhage, infection, pain and wound breakdown. Pain relief after episiotomy is primary concern of obstetrician and right of patient. Pain after delivery causes delayed mobility of patient, late initiation of breast feeding and may affect mother psychologically. Magnesium sulphate is readily available in obstetric units due to its diverse uses, wide safety margins and cost-effectiveness. Magnesium is a calcium channel blocker and noncompetitive N methyl D aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist with anti-nociceptive effects. Blocking of NMDA receptors inhibits central sensitization due to peripheral nociceptive stimulation. The role of magnesium has been evaluated as adjuvant for intra- and post-operative pain relief in orthopedic, gynecological, and thoracic surgeries and has established role in anesthesia and obstetrics. Lignocaine given locally does not provide adequate pain relief. There is need to find adjuvants to local anesthesia for pain relief after episiotomy. There is paucity of published data on the use of Magnesium sulphate as an adjunct to local anesthetics for episiotomy or its repair. No local study has been done in this regard.
Premature Enhanced Automated Capture of Comfort Knowledge
Acute PainPain3 moreThe goal of this observational study is to develop methods that could provide continual monitoring of comfort levels for preterm neonates in hospitals.
Pharmacogenetics of Ketamine in Children
Procedural PainThe need to treat the children with painful diagnostic-therapeutic procedures has increased in the last years. There is evidence from a wide scientific literature that drugs available in the setting of procedural sedation and analgesia such as midazolam, fentanyl, nitrous oxide, ketamine and propofol are absolutely safe without a significant incidence of adverse effects, if administered by anaesthesiologists and also trained pediatricians outside the operating room. Ketamine is a non-competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist that blocks glutamate excitatory effects. Ketamine's molecular mechanism is not restricted to the NMDA receptor. Several studies indicate interactions with a series of receptor systems, including opioid, cholinergic and dopaminergic receptors. Ketamine is a safe and effective drug during procedural analgesia and sedation applied to children outside the operating room. A recent multicenter study, showed that ketamine, without being associated with other analgesic or sedative drugs, is the drug regimen with the lowest risk of adverse effects during this procedures. Even though being safe, ketamine may cause some adverse effects. When ketamine is administered for procedural sedation outside the operating room, adverse effects more frequently recorded are emesis and recovery agitation, each with a prevalence of around 8%. Recovery agitation, defined as any abnormal behavioural response such as any combination of agitation, crying, hallucinations or nightmares after sedation, in some cases (around 1%) may be severe and leads to specific treatment, mainly benzodiazepines. Emesis and recovery agitation are minor adverse events, but both may be very unpleasant for the patient and may play a role in the perception of patients and their parents of the quality of sedation, especially in children who need repeated procedures. Identifying patients, particularly children with chronic illnesses and leukemia, at risk of emesis and recovery agitation may facilitate the choice of different drugs regimens, improving the quality of care. The aim of this study is the identification of genetic and epigenetic biomarkers useful to predict emesis and recovery agitation related to administration of ketamine for procedural sedation and analgesia applied to children and to correlate them with the pharmacokinetic profile.
The Success Rate of Cryotherapy Application in Primary Molars With Signs of Irreversible Pulpitis...
PainProceduralThe study is designed as a randomized controlled trial with two parallel groups. Children aged 5-9 years with primary molars from suffered symptomatic signs of irreversible pulpitis will be randomly assigned into two groups. The first group (experimental group) will be injected with 4% articaine 1:100.000 epinephrine (inferior alveolar nerve block). For the second group, the mandibular second primary molars will be anesthetized using 4% articaine 1:100.000 epinephrine using inferior alveolar nerve block.