85 percent of women of reproductive age experience consistent period cramps/menstrual pain, and 60% indicate that they do not use painkillers to relieve menstrual symptoms; there is a need for natural and non-medicative supplements to dysmenorrhea. The purpose of this clinical trial is to examine the effect of 'Cramp Bites'--classified by a mixture of natural ingredients researched to help with period pain--on women suffering from primary dysmenorrhea: this will be done through providing participants with the snack and surveying them on how it changes their period symptoms.
Participants will be asked the following information at the interview: name, month and year of birth, ethnicity, email, and phone number. As well, they will be prompted for their lifestyle habits, allergies, prior pregnancies and deliveries, presence of pathological disorders, medication (specifically asking about oral contraception), use of over-the-counter painkillers for period cramps/menstrual pain, expected date of next period, and menstrual cycle history. They will also be asked to complete the Menstrual Symptom Questionnaire. The baseline questionnaire will ask the participant about their prior experience with primary dysmenorrhea symptoms and with period cramps/menstrual pain on a sliding scale. The daily questionnaire will ask the participant to rate the extent of their period cramps/menstrual pain, to describe their pain, and whether they have taken any drugs for their period pain on that day. This questionnaire will be completed by all participants starting 2 days before their next onset of menstruation. Participants were randomly assigned Cramp Bites or the Placebo Snack: all other protocols remain the same. After their next menstrual cycle ends, participants will be asked to fill out a final questionnaire: this questionnaire will ask the participant if they have noticed any changes in their period pain, the efficacy of the snack, and if they have suggestions/comments about the snack. This study is divided into 4 parts. Some parts will take place at Cornell University, and other parts can be completed online.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
12
Participants who are randomly assigned this snack are instructed to eat one serving each day, starting 2 days before their next onset of menstruation, and extending 3 days into their menstrual cycle. They are instructed to eat their assigned snack each time they experience menstrual cramps, whether spasmodic or congestive.
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York, United States
Visual Analogue Scale for Spasmodic Cramps
Participants rate their spasmodic cramp severity before and after eating either Cramp Bites or the Placebo Snack using the Visual Analogue Scale. This is on a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 represents no cramps and 10 indicates extreme abdominal cramping.
Time frame: Participants complete this survey when they experience cramps: once before they consume their snack, and once after. Completion time for each survey is 7 minutes.
Visual Analogue Scale for Congestive Cramps
Participants rate their congestive cramp severity before and after eating either Cramp Bites or the Placebo Snack using the Visual Analogue Scale. This is on a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 represents no cramps and 10 indicates extreme abdominal cramping.
Time frame: Participants complete this survey when they experience cramps: once before they consume their snack, and once after. Completion time for each survey is 7 minutes.
Menstrual Symptom Questionnaire (MSQ)
Filled out during intake exam. MSQ indicates to what extent the participant suffers from spasmodic cramps, congestive cramps, or a mixture of the two.
Time frame: Participants complete this questionnaire with a researcher before the study. Time to complete this questionnaire is 15 minutes.
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