ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT07694271
Cryotherapy for Reducing Fistula Puncture Pain in Hemodialysis Patients
People on hemodialysis need their arteriovenous fistula (a blood vessel access point) punctured with a needle three times a week, which can cause pain and worry. This study compares three ways of managing that pain: (1) usual care, (2) applying an ice pack to a specific point on the hand before the needle is inserted (cryotherapy), and (3) applying a numbing gel (lidocaine/prilocaine) to the skin before the needle is inserted.
Adult hemodialysis patients with a working fistula were randomly assigned to one of these three groups. Over three dialysis sessions, researchers measured each patient's pain, anxiety, and other symptoms right before, right after, during, and after dialysis, as well as their quality of life and a physical stress marker (heart rate variability). The goal is to find out whether the ice pack method works as well as or better than usual care and the numbing gel at reducing pain and anxiety, so that a simple, low-cost, non-drug option could be offered to more patients in the future.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Pain, Procedural (During Sternum Dressing on Infants)
Arteriovenous Fistula
Kidney Failure, Chronic