The Efficacy of Local Infiltration Analgesia for Postoperative Pain Management After Total Knee...
Primary Total Knee ArthroplastyThis prospective, double-blinded, randomized controlled study evaluates the effects of peripheral nerve blocks with and without local infiltration analgesia for postoperative pain management after primary total knee arthroplasty. There are no any studies that show the demand for local infiltration analgesia when together peripheral nerve blocks are performed. Patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty will be randomly assigned to receive local infiltration analgesia with or without (placebo group) local anesthetic. All patients will receive peripheral nerve blocks for postoperative analgesia: femoral triangle and distal adductor canal blocks. Comparison of these two groups of patients will be based on the effects on postoperative pain control, the extent of motor blockade, the ability of early leg motion and ambulation, patients satisfaction rates over the time of clinical recovery. Consequently, the investigators hypothesized that peripheral nerve blocks (femoral triangle and distal adductor canal blocks) with and without local infiltration analgesia provide similar postoperative pain relieving effects and the ability of early mobilization after total knee arthroplasty.
Use of Tilapia Skin for Palate Repair and Protection After Graft Removal
PainPostoperative2 moreRandomised Clinical Study to evaluate the efficacy of tilapia skin as an occlusive biological dressing on palatal wound healing after free gingival graft harvesting.
Wound Infiltration as Part of an Opioid Free Pain Management Pathway Following Cesarean Delivery...
PainPostoperative3 moreThis study will investigate the effect of three types of wound infiltration on post Cesarean opioid analgesia consumption when used in conjunction with an opioid free postoperative analgesia pathway.
Postoperative Pain Results According to Pressure to Form Pneumoperitoneum
CholecystitisPostoperative PainThis study showed the difference in postoperative pain between the groups that performed surgery with the low-pressure pneumoperitoneum and the group that performed surgery in the standard-pressure pneumoperitoneum when robotic single-hole cholecystectomy was performed. The primary purpose of the study was to compare the differences in the visual analog scale (VAS) between the two groups and to demonstrate the effectiveness of pain relief after surgery. Secondly, the effect of the low-pressure pneumoperitoneum on the patient's postoperative recovery and outcome was compared with the control group by comparing the length of stay, operation time, and postoperative complications.
RCT of Counseling Intervention on Post-op Opiate Use
Post-operative PainOpioid Use1 moreThis study is a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effect of a simple counseling intervention on post-operative narcotic requirements, with the hypothesis that women receiving this intervention will use fewer narcotics for pain management following cesarean section.
Comparing Postoperative Pain Following COX-2 and Prostanoids Expression
Female Genital DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to compare postoperative pain following COX-2 and prostanoids expression in women who underwent laparoscopic surgery for female genital disease in order to evaluate the effect of COX-2 on local inflammation, COX-2 and prostanoids expression followed by exposure time to carbon dioxide(CO2) gas, and degree of postoperative pain.
Impact of Topical Antiadhesion Therapy on Wound Healing and Postoperative Pain After Anal Surgery...
Anal Wound2QR-complex is a patented molecule extracted from Aloe vera barbadensis leaves that blocks the adhesion of pathogenic microbes to human epithelial cells and tissues [9]. Anti-adhesion therapy such as 2QR-complex has been suggested as an alternative to antibiotics in the treatment of bacterial infections. 2QR-complex based products have already shown comparable efficacy to antibiotics in treating mucosal infections such as bacterial vaginosis. In the present study we aim to assess the efficacy of 2QR-complex in pain relief and promotion of anal wound healing after anal surgery. We presumed that anal discomfort and prolonged healing after surgery for anal fissure, fistula, and hemorrhoids may in part be due to contamination of the wound with fecal bacteria that colonize at the surgical site. Therefore, we assumed that the use of topical anti-adhesive 2QR-complex-based product may serve to minimize this negative impact on wound healing.
Ultrasound-Guided Erector Spinae Plan Block for Colorectal Surgery
Colorectal CancerPostoperative PainColorectal cancer is a common and lethal disease. It still remains the third most common cause of cancer death in women and the second leading cause of death in men. Pain control is an important direction of postoperative management in malignancy surgery. Inadequate pain control increases cardiac and respiratory complications in these critical patients. Erector spinae plane (ESP) block is a recently described regional anesthesia technique that blocks the dorsal and ventral rami of the spinal nerves and the sympathetic nerve fibers. While the ESP block has been shown to provide effective postoperative analgesia after thoracic, and abdominal surgeries. Our aim in this study was to investigate bilateral thoracic ESP block for providing successful postoperative pain management following colorectal surgery.
Block of the Sphenopalatine Nerve Ganglion for Postoperative Analgesia
SurgeryAnesthesia2 moreTranssphenoidal surgery is considered safe and effective and is currently the procedure of choice for the removal of intrasellar lesions. Direct transnasal access to the sphenoid sinus, without the need for detachment of the nasal septum, provides less postoperative morbidity compared to traditional methods. Sphenopalatine ganglion block is known for its efficacy in otorhinolaryngological surgeries in which the sinuses are approached by transnasal endoscopy, as an important part of postoperative analgesia. However, in a neurosurgical environment, specifically in the treatment of tumors of the sella turcica, the use of the blockade of the referred ganglion to produce postoperative analgesia has been used in a scarce way in the literature. The primary objective of the study is to verify whether blocking the sphenopalatine nerve ganglion in the nasopharynx posterior wall provides better postoperative pain control in surgeries with nasal access for transsphenoidal approach, compared to the placebo group. As secondary objectives, the investigators will observe the consumption of opioids in the intraoperative period, in addition to the incidence of nausea, vomiting and postoperative headache also within 24 hours. Forty patients with physical status P1, P2 or P3 will be prospectively analyzed by the American Society of Anesthesiology (ASA) to undergo microsurgery for tumors with a sellar and / or suprasellar location, with transsphenoidal access, in patients with an age range between 18 and 64 years old, including men and women.
A Randomized Control Trial Comparing Analgesic Benefits of Ultrasound-guided Single vs Continuous...
PainPostoperativethe purpose of this study is to compare opioid consumption in morphine equivalents between the groups that received postoperative analgesia with intrathecal morphine versus US guided QL blocks versus US guided QL catheters