Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01631695

Clinical Evaluation of Medasense Pain Monitor Performances

Evaluation of the Performances of Medasense Pain Monitor During General Anesthesia and Postoperative Recovery Compared to Pain Related Physiological Indicators and to Subjective Assessment of Pain by Anesthesiologist

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
96 (actual)
Sponsor
Medasense Biometrics Ltd · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In this study, the performances of Medasense's non-invasive pain monitoring is compared with standard pain related indicators, such as heart rate, galvanic skin response, etc. , and with a subjective pain level assessment. The subjective pain level is assessed by the anesthesiologist when the patient is under general anesthesia and by the patient and a nurse in post anesthetic care unit (PACU). The study is based on recording and analyzing the subject's physiological signals, while recording painful events, medication dosing and different clinical signs.

Detailed description

Pain is an unpleasant sensation, ranging from slight discomfort to intense suffering. Since pain is a subjective phenomenon, it has frequently defied objective, quantitative measurements. Today, in order to measure pain, subjective uni-dimensional scales are used to quantify pain. One of the most common scale used to rate a patient's pain intensity is the visual analog scale (VAS), usually scored from 0 to 100. Hitherto, those scales are based on the subjective evaluation of pain by the patient. During anesthesia the patient cannot communicate and therefore the verbal or other report is impossible. Therefore, due to misrepresentation of the existence or extent of pain, care providers may fail to estimate the correct measure of pain and give too much or too little medication. A scoring system of pain level is therefore needed. That is the problem Medasense's system tries to approach. In this study investigators intend to test and analyze the performances of Medasense pain monitor by comparing its results with standard pain related indicators and with subjective patient's pain level assessment. The patient's pain level will be assessed by the anesthesiologist during surgery based on known pain stimuli, medications administered and clinical signs, and by the PACU nurse and patient's reports, when the patient is in recovery.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2009-11-01
Primary completion
2012-05-01
Completion
2012-05-01
First posted
2012-06-29
Last updated
2013-10-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01631695. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.