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UnknownNCT03926559

The Effect of Neuraxial Morphine (Duramorph) on Pain Control

Status
Unknown
Phase
EARLY_Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
125 (estimated)
Sponsor
Augusta University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

With the rise of the opioid epidemic, it is important for physicians to be more mindful of the amount of narcotic prescriptions that are being written every day. In the early postpartum period, pain and fatigue are the most common problems reported by women. Untreated pain has negative consequences on the amount of opioid narcotics used, postpartum depression, and the potential development of persistent chronic pain. While pain can interfere with a woman's ability to adequately take care of her newborn, narcotic abuse can lead to excessive maternal drowsiness and increased infant mortality in the new breastfeeding mother. The most common sources of pain after a vaginal delivery include breast engorgement, uterine contractions and perineal lacerations. Perineal lacerations are immediate postpartum complications of the vaginal birth process, defined as injury that involves the bulbocavernosum muscle complex (second degree), and may involve the anal sphincter complex (third degree) or the anal epithelium (fourth degree). Prevention of chronic and severe postpartum pain, especially after a cesarean delivery has been extensively studied, however, much paucity in research exists for the management of postpartum pain from perineal tears. Compared to patients with first degree tears or intact perineum, women with severe perineal lacerations (second degree or greater) have increased analgesic requirement up to the fifth postpartum day. . Epidural morphine has been accepted by anesthesiologists as treatment for acute pain. In obstetrics, 2-3 mg of epidural morphine was found to be sufficient to provide post-episiotomy analgesia. Neuraxial morphine has been used for analgesic management after a cesarean section, especially to reduce the amount of oral pain medications used in the first 24 hours, but limited data exists on the use of neuraxial morphine after a severe perineal laceration repair in the setting of a vaginal delivery. Niv et al (1994) studied the effect of epidural morphine and monitored its timing of administration in post-epiostomy pain onset. They noted that if epidural morphine is administered before the onset of pain in an episiotomy repair it is much more effective than if given after the onset. This study hopes to take the prior 1994 study a step further and incorporates it's data to investigate whether neuraxial morphine given after a severe perineal laceration repair mitigates postpartum pain.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGMorphine.Pregnant patients with a perineal tear postpartum receive 2mg of morphine through their epidural. This will be a one time dose immediately postpartum.

Timeline

Start date
2019-04-01
Primary completion
2021-05-21
Completion
2021-05-21
First posted
2019-04-24
Last updated
2020-07-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03926559. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.