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The goal of this pilot clinical trial is to learn whether meditation can help improve recovery in children and adults having surgery for kidney stones. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will be randomly assigned to the meditation group and the control group to understand how meditation affects recovery after surgery. Participants will be asked to:
Full description
Context:
Pain is common after surgery to remove urinary stones, and current options for post-operative pain management are limited. Pre-operative anxiety is a well-known clinical entity that is associated with a higher risk of post-operative pain. Meditation is an ancient discipline that has been used for a wide range of presumed benefits including improving pain and anxiety. Meditation has been studied in a variety of clinical settings, but its effects have not been assessed among patients having ureteroscopy to remove kidney and/or ureteral stones.
Objectives:
To determine the effect of a peri-operative meditation intervention on physical and emotional health in adolescent and adult patients undergoing elective unilateral ureteroscopy for unilateral renal or ureteral stones.
To determine the feasibility of implementing a perioperative meditation intervention in patients undergoing elective unilateral ureteroscopy for ureteral or renal stones
Study Design:
Pilot randomized controlled trial
Setting/Participants:
This study will recruit 50 patients aged 12 years or older at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania, who will be undergoing elective unilateral ureteroscopy for unilateral renal or ureteral stones with or without stent placement. Participants will be randomized to the meditation intervention or usual care treatment arms.
Intervention: Participants will be randomized to the intervention (meditation) or control groups. Participants will learn and practice a daily 20-minute meditation for 2-4 weeks before scheduled surgery (whichever is the maximum length of time from enrollment) to 2 weeks post-operatively using the provided audio guide.
The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) instruments in the domains of Pain Intensity, Pain Interference, Anxiety, and Depression will be utilized. Patients will complete the questionnaire at the time of enrollment, and at post-operative days 3, 14, and 30. General information, health history, and kidney stone related events will be assessed from the medical record.
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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