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A Pilot Trial of Disposable Nitrous Oxide Canisters in Providing Pain Control During Burn Dressing Changes

Pain, Acute | Burns

Improvements in burn care have resulted in increased survival. Despite these improved outcomes one of the leading challenges of burn care remains providing adequate analgesia during routine wound care and dressing changes. The traditional use of narcotics is challenging as the therapeutic window between analgesia and suppression of breathing becomes narrow with the intense pain and high doses of narcotics needed for dressing changes.

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Conditions de participation

  • Sexe:

    ALL
  • Âges admissibles:

    18 and up

Critères de participation

Inclusion criteria

* adult burn patients admitted to the Health Sciences Centre
* total body surface area burned of 5-20%

Exclusion criteria

* admitted to intensive care unit
* unable to participate in the measurement outcomes (sedated, cognitively impaired, unable to understand English or visually impaired)
* medical condition that precludes using nitrous oxide (respiratory disease and significant cardiovascular disease 5).
* pregnant
* physically unable to hold the canister
* \<90% SaO2 on room air
* face burn
* pre-injury narcotics (relative exclusion)
* use of IV ketamine
* pre-existing lung injury

Lieu de l'étude

University of Manitoba
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Canada

Contactez l'équipe d'étude

Primary Contact

Justin P Gawaziuk, MSc

[email protected]
2047873669
Étude parrainée par
University of Manitoba
Participants recherchés
Plus d'informations
ID de l'étude: NCT03695887