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To provide a preliminary evaluation of the correlation between Numeric rating Score (NRS) and skin conductance responses per second at rest and in response to a painful stimulus. Sensitivity and specificity will be calculated for NRS and skin conductance responses per sec to a standardized painful stimulus. Furthermore, predictors of pain will be examined.
Full description
Cardiac surgery patients will be consented for participation in this trial. They will be asked about their pre-existing pain, anxiety about the needle-insertion and anxiety about the outcome of the operation, and employment status. This information will be obtained from self-reported schemas from the patients about presence/absence of pain and anxiety (the response options: yes/no) (1). The intensities of pain and anxiety will measured with NRS also ranging from 0 to 10 with one statement in each range: 0 no pain and 10 worst possible pain, and 0 no anxiety and 10 worst possible anxiety. The participants were requested to mark the point at the line that best agreed with how the pain and anxiety were experienced. The intensity of pain scored more than 3 on NRS was considered to be equal to moderate pain or more (1). Furthermore, patients in the Cardiac Surgery unit will be observed when undergoing pre-defined standardized painful stimuli as part of the standard of care treatment prior to and during surgery. The proposed study is structured using three events.
During all defined events, the subject's skin conductance responses will be evaluated using the PainMonitor, and the subject will be asked to report pain using the 10 point NRS scale when awake. Before intubation when the patient is anesthetized, without stimuli, it is defined that the patient has no pain.
During these events, the number of skin conductance responses/sec will be analyzed in the defined time period, and this value will be used for statistical analyses. NRS scores will be obtained after the event and the value of the felt pain during the event will be asked for.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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