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Post-cesarean section (CS) pain is commonly treated with acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and opioid medications as needed following delivery. About 300,000 women annually who were exposed to opioids after CS will go on to use opioids chronically. Reducing the quantity of post-CS opioids has been shown to decrease the amount of opioids used without compromising pain control. Bridge is a small device that sits on the outer ear and works similarly to a transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) unit to decrease pain sensation without medications. It has been shown to effectively reduce pain to decrease medication requirements after surgeries. This study aims to see if women receiving the Bridge device use need less pain medication than those without the device.
Full description
Cesarean delivery is one of the most performed surgeries in the U.S. with approximately 1.15 million surgeries performed annually. Despite this, postoperative pain management remains a challenge. Prescribed total milligram morphine equivalents (MMEs) can range from 25 MMEs (equivalent to 3.3 oxycodone 5-mg tablets) to 1,950 MMEs (equivalent to 260 oxycodone 5-mg tablets). Additionally, the post discharge analgesia prescription is not correlated with the 24-hour predischarge opioid use or pain score. Most U.S. women who are prescribed opioids after a cesarean delivery receive at least 10 more tablets than necessary. A study looking at individualizing opioid prescriptions based on inpatient requirements found that women used about 60% of their prescription, regardless of the amount of opioids prescribed. Decreasing opioid requirement after cesarean delivery, can decrease women's exposure to opioids, reduce the risk of neonatal central nervous system depression due to exposure in breastmilk, and limit the potential for extra opioids from unused, filled prescriptions to fall into the wrong hands. Post-cesarean mothers use opioids for a median of 8 days after delivery. Bridge is a minimally invasive device shown in previous studies to reduce pain medication requirements in the post-operative acute recovery period. The device is a auricular percutaneous electrical nerve stimulator that modulates pain receptors leading to reduced pain sensation. This trial study to examine the utility of the Bridge device as an adjunct to standard of care post-cesarean pain regimens (acetaminophen, ibuprofen or ketorolac, and oxycodone or other similar opioid). Post-cesarean patients will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to Bridge device, sham device, or standard of care treatment and followed through the postpartum period.
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0 participants in 3 patient groups
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Ellen M Murrin, DO; Antonio Saad, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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