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The Effect of Foot Reflexology on Patients Undergoing Appendectomy Surgery

B

Bartın Unıversity

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sleep Quality
Bowel Functions
Reflexology
Nursing
Pain
Appendectomy
Abdominal Pain

Treatments

Other: Foot Reflexology

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06407622
BartınU-SBF-BKÇ-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pain is an unpleasant experience that can negatively affect all aspects of the patients life and lead to a decrease in quality of life. Pain can also be encountered as a reason for a surgical intervention. For this reason, it has become one of the most common problems experienced by patients in the postoperative period. Pain management is a universal requirement in health care and is of great importance for patients. If the pain is not managed well in the postoperative period, it may cause some complications in the patient. If pain is controlled, early discharge of the patient, lower healthcare costs and increased patient satisfaction are achieved. In terms of providing effective pain control, it is provided by nurses, who are health professionals, to spend more time with the patient, to lead the patient in pain management and to analyze the results. The aim of the thesis study is to evaluate the effect of foot reflexology on pain intensity, sleep quality and bowel functions in patients who have undergone appendectomy surgery.

Full description

Optimal management of postoperative pain is associated with reduced morbidity and faster recovery times, as well as improved physical function and quality of life. Despite efforts to minimize postoperative pain, 61% of outpatients still experience moderate/extreme pain upon discharge. Pain management is an important aspect of patient care, and nurses play an important role in providing pain assessment and treatment in the acute care setting. The use of non-pharmacological pain relief techniques has been found to be effective with fewer side effects and complications. Reflexology, one of the types of complementary and alternative medicine, has begun to be used as a nursing intervention along with modern medicine as a non-pharmacological method. When the investigators look at the past years; The effects of foot reflexology on pain intensity, nausea, anxiety, delirium, and hemodynamic parameters were investigated. The studies conducted include cancer patients, burn patients, intensive care patients and dialysis patients. However, in previous studies, no study was found investigating the effect of foot reflexology on sleep quality and bowel functions in patients undergoing surgical intervention. This study is thought to be the first to evaluate the effect of foot reflexology on sleep quality and bowel functions in surgical patients. In this respect, it is a study that will contribute to the literature.

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • • 18 years and over,

    • Having undergone appendectomy surgery,
    • No complications such as bleeding, nausea or vomiting after appendectomy surgery,
    • Not using patient-controlled analgesia for postoperative pain control,
    • Pain score ≥4 according to the Visual Analog Scale,
    • No hypertension problems,
    • Able to speak and understand Turkish
    • No visual or auditory problems,
    • No diagnosed psychiatric problems,
    • No diagnosed bowel problems,
    • Do not have infectious skin diseases on their feet (such as zoster, fungus, warts, eczema),
    • Patients who do not have deep vein thrombosis, tombophlebitis, any fracture, neuropathy, osteomyelitis, osteoporosis, or ligament injury in their feet or legs,
    • Volunteer patients will be included.

Exclusion criteria

  • • Complications developed after appendectomy surgery,

    • Pain score <4 according to the Visual Analog Scale,
    • Those with hypertension problems,
    • Unable to communicate,
    • Having visual or auditory problems,
    • Having a diagnosed psychiatric problem,
    • Having a diagnosed bowel problem,
    • Those with infectious skin diseases on their feet (such as zoster, fungus, warts, eczema),
    • Patients with deep vein thrombosis, tombophlebitis, any fracture, neuropathy, osteomyelitis, osteoporosis, ligament injury in the foot and leg,
    • Non-voluntary patients will be excluded from the scope.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

120 participants in 2 patient groups

Patients undergoing appendectomy surgery who received foot reflexology
Experimental group
Description:
The study will be carried out with 120 patients hospitalized after appendectomy surgery in the surgical clinic of Bartın State Hospital. In the postoperative period, patients will be divided into experimental (n = 60) and control (n = 60) groups by block randomization with a computer-aided program.
Treatment:
Other: Foot Reflexology
Patients who underwent appendectomy surgery without foot reflexology
No Intervention group
Description:
The study will be carried out with 120 patients hospitalized after appendectomy surgery in the surgical clinic of Bartın State Hospital. In the postoperative period, patients will be divided into experimental (n = 60) and control (n = 60) groups by block randomization with a computer-aided program.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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