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Acute Postoperative Pain Prevalence and Intensity in the First 72 Hours

W

Wollo University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Post Operative Pain

Treatments

Procedure: surgery

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06065683
Acute pain

Details and patient eligibility

About

Postoperative pain is poorly studied in developing countries. Severe pain after surgery remains a major problem, occurring in 50% to 70% of the patients. Differences exist across countries. Despite numerous published studies, the degree of pain following many types of surgery in everyday clinical practice is unknown. To improve postoperative pain treatment and develop procedure-specific, optimized pain-treatment protocols, the prevalence and severity of postoperative pain must first be identified.

This study aimed to determine the incidence and intensity of acute postoperative pain, to identify populations associated with a higher risk in order to guide resource allocation, and to investigate whether inexpensive analgesic modalities are currently utilized maximally.

Full description

Postoperative pain management remains one of the major challenges in the care of surgical patients in many parts of the world. Despite improved care, studies show that postoperative pain continues to be inadequately treated and that patients still suffer moderate to severe pain after surgery. Despite an improved understanding of pain mechanisms, several risk factors, and advances in pain management strategies, postoperative pain continues to be a widespread and unresolved problem.

In Ethiopia, pain management is done in the traditional way, and pain control regimens vary from center to center and again from person to person in the same center due to a lack of pain management protocol. Overall pain management criteria used are not clear and sometimes decisions may be influenced by what is available in stock. Therefore, this research on the assessment of postoperative pain management provides information for clinicians to formulate protocols for the management of postoperative pain and for hospital managers in order to guide resource allocation to use limited resources efficiently and plan for optimum postoperative pain management.

In the study, the investigators used a numerical pain rating scale for pain immediately after surgery for the first 72 hours after surgery. The prevalence of mild, moderate, or severe pain and median pain scores were calculated. An evaluation will be performed at eight time points: at T2, T4, T8, T12, T24, T48, and T72. They consider 350 patients from all surgical wards. All surgical procedures were assigned to 5 well-defined groups. When a group contained less than 20 patients the data was excluded from the analysis.

Enrollment

350 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age ≥18 years old
  • Able to provide informed consent
  • Able to verbalize or indicate pain by using a traditional verbal scale such as the numeric rating scale at the 2nd hr. of Post anesthesia care unit arrival.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients unable to self-report acute pain
  • Patients with a history of chronic pain, moderate to high acute pain previous to surgery.
  • Patients with a previous diagnosis of chronic cognitive impairment (Dementia, Alzheimer ...)
  • Patients with a previous diagnosis of Neurologic impairment (paraplegia, q quadriplegia...)
  • The patients excluded from the study will be patients with mental and psychological problems.

Trial design

350 participants in 5 patient groups

T2 hour
Treatment:
Procedure: surgery
T12 hour
Treatment:
Procedure: surgery
T24 hour
Treatment:
Procedure: surgery
T48 hour
Treatment:
Procedure: surgery
T72 hour
Treatment:
Procedure: surgery

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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