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Patients Undergoing Craniocerebral Surgery

Tundra lists 1 Patients Undergoing Craniocerebral Surgery clinical trial. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT06534710

Effect of Electronic Moxibustion Apparatus on Pain Degree and Wound Healing of Patients After Craniocerebral Surgery

According to statistics, about 70% to 84% of patients after craniocerebral surgery will have moderate to severe wound pain, especially within 24h after surgery \[1\]. Pain can reduce the comfort of patients, affect the speed of incision healing, and interfere with the prognosis and rehabilitation effect in the later stage. At present, non-steroidal drugs are often used clinically for analgesic intervention, but the use of drugs often brings gastrointestinal discomfort such as nausea and vomiting, and is easy to produce dependence. In addition, redness, swelling, fluid leakage, cracking or no hair growth around the incision are prone to poor surgical incision healing after cranial surgery \[2\]. Poor healing of surgical incision will not only lead to prolonged hospital stay, increase hospital costs, but also bring trauma and pain to patients, and even induce medical disputes. Moxibustion is an important branch of TCM physiotherapy. It has the functions of warming, clearing and dispersing. It can inhibit inflammation through various ways, relieve local pain and edema, and its effect is mild. At present, moxibustion is mostly used to promote the recovery of urinary or gastrointestinal functions, and the healing of surgical wounds after anal fistula or perianal abscess. There are no relevant studies on its application to surgical incision in patients after craniocerebral surgery. The effect of moxibustion on improving the pain and healing of surgical incision in patients after craniocerebral surgery is still unknown. Considering the disadvantages of traditional moxibustion, such as inconvenient operation, easy burn at high temperature and environmental pollution by moxibustion smoke, this study will use an electronic moxibustion instrument. Patients on the third day after craniectomy were divided into two groups by random number table method. Patients in the control group were given routine care; patients in the experimental group were irradiated with the postoperative incision with an electronic moxibustion instrument every day on the basis of the control group. The pain score at the surgical incision, the healing score value of the surgical incision, the healing time of the incision and the occurrence of adverse events during the incision healing were compared between the two groups.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2025-02-17

1 state

Patients Undergoing Craniocerebral Surgery