Pain
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Intraarticular morphine versus dexamethasone in chronic arthritis.
Intraarticular morphine inhibits pain after knee surgery without overt toxicity. This study examined intraarticular morphine in chronic arthritis. We undertook a randomized double-blind comparison between intraarticular morphine (3 mg), dexamethasone (4 mg) and saline (3 ml) in 44 patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis or osteoarthritis of the knee. ⋯ No patient displayed untoward side effects. Synovial leukocyte counts were lower after morphine than after saline. In conclusion, intraarticular morphine produces analgesia of similar magnitude to dexamethasone and it may have antiinflammatory actions in chronic arthritis.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Suckling- and sucrose-induced analgesia in human newborns.
This experiment had three goals: 1. To identify the basis of sucking-induced analgesia in healthy, term, newborn humans undergoing the painful, routine, procedure of heel lance and blood collection. 2. To evaluate how taste-induced and sucking-induced analgesias combine to combat pain. 3. ⋯ Sucking an unflavored pacifier was analgesic when and only when suck rate exceeded 30 sucks/min. 2. The combination of sucrose and nonnutritive sucking was remarkably analgesic; we saw no behavioral indication in nine of the ten infants that the heel lance had even occurred. 3. Grimacing was reduced to almost naught by procedures that essentially eliminated crying and markedly reduced heart rate during the blood harvesting procedure.