Pain is an expected part of surgical recovery but effective pain management remains challenging. The high variability in postoperative pain experience and analgesic treatment response between patients is part of the challenge. Few studies have yet combined preoperative assessment of responses to experimental pain with measurements of cognitive and emotional processes in the prediction of postoperative pain. We hypothesize, that preoperative evoked brain potentials (using standard electroencephalographic brain imaging), endogenous pain inhibition capacity (conditioned pain modulation), responses to pressure/thermal pain stimulation, and/or situational pain-related catastrophic thinking are useful clinical predictors of postoperative pain and analgesic consumption.
Preselected preoperative predictor variables/individual patient characteristics include the following: * Evoked brain potentials (using standard electroencephalographic brain imaging) * Capacity of descending pain inhibition induced by a cold pressor test (2C in 120 sec) * Pressure pain detection and tolerance thresholds in muscle (m.quadriceps) * Pressure pain tolerance thresholds in bone (sternum and tibia) * Heat pain tolerance threshold in skin (forearm) * Responses to the Situational and Dispositional Pain Catastrophizing Scale * Response to the State-Trait and Anxiety Inventory * Response to the Beck's Depression Inventory
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
40
Deparment of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark
Aarhus, Denmark
RECRUITINGPostoperative pain intensity
11-point (0-10) numerical rating scale of pain intensity
Time frame: Within the first 5 days after surgery
Postoperative pain unpleasantness
11-point (0-10) numerical rating scale of pain unpleasantness
Time frame: Within the first 5 days after surgery
Postoperative consumption of analgesics
The use of all pain-related treatments, including rescue analgesics and any other concomitant pain treatments.
Time frame: Within the first 5 days after surgery
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