Telehealth Mindfulness After Spine Surgery
Lumbar Spine SurgeryChronic Low-back Pain1 moreThe goal of this pilot clinical trial is to compare two behavioral interventions for patients who are recovering from lumbar spinal surgery for a degenerative spine condition. The study aims to answer the following questions: Is it feasible and acceptable to deliver the interventions and conduct the study procedures in this patient population? Do the interventions benefit patients with regard to pain-related, functional, opioid use, and psychosocial outcomes at 3 and 6 months after surgery, and does one intervention have more benefit than the other? Participants will be asked to do the following: Complete self-report questionnaires online before spine surgery, and around 2 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months after spine surgery. Complete a sensory pain task before spine surgery, and around 2 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months after spine surgery. Around two weeks after surgery, participants will be randomly assigned by chance to one of two behavioral interventions - Mindfulness or Education. Participants will then be asked to attend 8, weekly sessions with a study treatment coach over telehealth (online with camera and microphone).
Effects of an Opioid Free/Sparing Care Pathway for Patients Undergoing Obesity Surgery
ObesityPain1 moreThe opioid consumption has exploded in the western world, and for some patient populations such as obese patients, patients with sleep apnoea or patients undergoing cancer treatment, opioid-sparing/ opioid-free strategies could have positive effects on outcomes. Studies suggest that opioids could have opioid-induced immunosuppression, induce chronic post-operative pain syndrome and hyperalgesia in addition to the more well-known side effects such as respiratory depression, nausea, bladder, and bowel dysfunction. Hence, new studies are needed on the impact of person-centered care programs that combine pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical strategies to reduce the adverse short and long-term effects of opioid therapy. The overall aim is to evaluate the short-, medium- and long-term effects of opioid-free care pathways with or without person-centred care compared to conventional opioid-based treatment in patients undergoing obesity surgery. Specific aims Determine the effects of opioid-free care with or without person-centred care compared with conventional opioid-based general anaesthesia on the cognitive and physical quality of recovery after surgery up to 24 months after surgery (short-term: postoperative to discharge, medium-term: 14 days, 3 months, long-term: 6 months, 12 months and 24 months). Describe the clinical monitoring trend regarding nociceptive response intraoperatively between opioid-free and conventional care. Map the impact of opioid-free anaesthesia (with and without person-centred care) on the usage of opioids up to 24 months after hospital discharge. Explore the patients' experience of quality of life, self-efficacy and recovery after surgery in opioid-free care with or without person-centred care during the first year post-surgery. The aims will be evaluated by a prospective, randomized, non-blinded, non-commercial multi-centre study (Nov 2018-Dec 2022) approved by the Swedish Medicines Agency (EudraCT 2017003830-97) and the ethical review board (DNR 1006-17).
Acupuncture for Vasectomy Pre-procedural Anxiety and Pain Control in the Primary Care Setting
AcupuncturePain2 moreThis study compares auricular (ear) acupuncture and body acupuncture (Koffman protocol) versus clinic standardized pre-vasectomy medications to determine which has better outcomes at improving pre-procedural anxiety and procedural pain relief and medication usage in adult male patients following vasectomy.
Liposomal Bupivacaine Versus Lidocaine for Skin Graft Donor Site Pain
PainPostoperative1 moreDonor site pain study comparing post-operative donor site pain and opioid consumption after use of Lidocaine, Liposomal Bupivicaine or regional nerve block for split thickness skin graft harvesting in patients with less than 20% TBSA burn wounds and less than %5 Deep partial or full thickness burn wounds.
Feasibility Study for Intrathoracic Nerve Stimulation
Postoperative PainThe purpose of this study is to conduct an early clinical evaluation of safety and feasibility of peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) of the intercostal nerves using an electrical lead placed in the thoracic cavity as a safe and effective method of pain control after cardiothoracic surgery.
Liposomal Bupivacaine Versus Plain Bupivacaine After Intercostal Injections For Pain Management...
PainPostoperative1 moreThe purpose of this study is to assess pharmacokinetics of liposomal bupivacaine (Exparel) after multilevel intercostal injections of this local anesthetic for pain control during and after thoracoscopic surgeries. The specific aim of this study is to evaluate plasma concentration of bupivacaine after intraoperative intercostal injections of 266 mg of liposomal bupivacaine and compare it to plasma concentrations of bupivacaine after intercostal injections of 2mg/kg of 0.5% plain Bupivacaine with maximal dose of 30 ml or 150 mg. The hypothesis of the study is that plasma concentration of bupivacaine after intercostal injections of 266 mg of liposomal bupivacaine will be similar to concentrations after injections of plain bupivacaine, and will remain below the toxic level threshold range of 2000-3000 ng/mL (2-3 mg/L) at which central nervous system and cardiovascular adverse events would be expected to occur. The secondary objective is to evaluate if intercostal injections of 266 mg of liposomal bupivacaine will significantly reduce opioid consumption and postsurgical pain, within the first 48 hours and up to 3 months after minimally invasive thoracic surgeries, to determine if both acute and chronic post-thoracotomy pain can be decreased by intraoperative intercostal injections of liposomal bupivacaine. Additionally, the rate of pneumonia, the rate of atrial fibrillation and length of hospital stay will be assessed as secondary outcomes after thoracic surgeries. These outcomes can be affected by the level of postoperative pain and inflammation. Significance of this study: If positive, the results of this research have the potential to significantly improve pain management after thoracoscopic surgery. Based on prior experience, prolonged analgesia after liposomal bupivacaine injection is safe, and may help reduce perioperative opioid consumption and decrease opioid related complications. It will improve patient comfort, eliminate need for indwelling neuraxial catheters and risks associated with them.
Closed-Loop Deep Brain Stimulation for Refractory Chronic Pain
Spinal Cord InjuriesNerve Injury8 moreChronic pain affects 1 in 4 US adults, and many cases are resistant to almost any treatment. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) holds promise as a new option for patients suffering from treatment-resistant chronic pain, but traditional approaches target only brain regions involved in one aspect of the pain experience and provide continuous 24/7 brain stimulation which may lose effect over time. By developing new technology that targets multiple, complimentary brain regions in an adaptive fashion, the investigators will test a new therapy for chronic pain that has potential for better, more enduring analgesia.
Celecoxib in Postoperative Analgesia for Radius Fracture Surgery
PainPostoperativePatients scheduled for elective osteosynthesis of the distal radius will be randomized to receive celecoxib 100 mg orally (PO) at 6 in the morning before surgery and every 12 hours for 2 days thereafter, or a placebo pill in the same regimen. After surgery under general anaesthesia, they will receive paracetamol 1 g intravenously (IV) every 6 hours and if pain intensity is greater than 4 on a numeric rating scale (NRS) of 0-10, piritramid 15 mg intramuscularly (IM) will be administered. Pain intensity, piritramid consumption and side effects of treatment will be recorded in a questionnaire for 2 days.
Pre-emptive Intravenous Morphine for Acute Post-craniotomy Pain.
PainPostoperative2 moreWe propose a double-blind randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effect of intravenously administered morphine at surgery conclusion on acute postoperative pain in patients recovering from craniotomy surgery. Participating adults having craniotomy surgery will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to intraoperative intravenous administration of 0.08 mg/kg morphine at dura closure, or a matching placebo.
Brief Postoperative Hypnosis Intervention as Multimodal Analgesia After Major Abdominal Surgery...
HypnosisERAS1 moreThis study will measure the efficacy of hypnosis on pain after a major abdominal surgery. The aim is to further improve comfort and rehabilitation of patients after surgery, beyond the usual early recovery after surgery (ERAS) enhancement protocols. Patients will be randomised (1:2) to the standard of care regarding pain management and rehabilitation, as part of the ERAS protocol, vs. ERAS + an additional hypnosis intervention. In this group, hospitalised patients are given 3 hypnosis sessions targeting analgesia between postoperative day 1 to 12. The study will collect outcomes about pain and its burden, sleep quality, appetite, mobilisation and mood. Secondary outcomes also include use of pain medication and length of hospital stay.