Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00010855

Nonpharmacologic Analgesia for Invasive Procedures

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
390 (planned)
Sponsor
National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) · NIH
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Analgesics and sedatives administered to control distress from minimally invasive surgical procedures have limited effectiveness and serious side effects. Unabated distress not only interferes with smooth progression of the ongoing procedure, but can elicit adverse responses when patients need additional intervention. The long-term objective of this research is to provide a safe and practical behavioral method for reducing cognitive and physiologic distress associated with invasive procedures. Currently, this method should benefit at least 8 million patients annually in the US. Extrapolating the risk of intravenous conscious sedation to the number of invasive procedures performed annually, we predict that 47,000 patients will suffer serious cardiorespiratory complications and 2,600 will die. These numbers do not include effects of the psychological damage inflicted by poorly managed procedure-related stress on patients' subsequent health behavior. This application sets out to pursue three aims: 1) Prospectively determine the impact of self-hypnotic relaxation on cognitive and physiologic distress during tumor embolizations; 2) Prospectively determine the impact of self-hypnotic relaxation on distress in the postoperative period; 3) Determine the impact of intraprocedural self-hypnotic relaxation on distress during subsequent tumor embolization. We hypothesize that: 1) Self-hypnotic relaxation decreases cognitive and physiologic distress during tumor embolizations. 2) Self-hypnotic relaxation decreases cognitive and physiologic distress after tumor embolization when post-embolization ischemia is expected to induce painful stimuli and systemic distress. 3) The beneficial effect of self-hypnotic coping skills acquired during an invasive procedure carries over to the next invasive procedure. Upon completion, the efficacy and durability of procedural administration of nonpharmacologic analgesia will be known by a rigorous and practical assessment. The relative performance of self-hypnotic relaxation will be quantified compared to standard care and empathic controls in a well-characterized population of patients within the controlled and monitored environment of a busy interventional radiology practice. Results from this competing renewal will provide the next level of data needed for future study design to determine broad clinical utility in a multicenter randomized controlled trial.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSelf-hypnotic relaxation

Timeline

Start date
1997-09-01
Primary completion
2007-04-01
Completion
2007-04-01
First posted
2001-02-05
Last updated
2008-08-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00010855. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.