Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Low dose amitriptyline in the treatment of chronic pain.
The analgesic efficacy of amitriptyline 25 mg was compared with placebo in 41 patients with chronic (more than 3 months) nonmalignant pain, using a double-blind randomised multiple-dose 3-week treatment period crossover design. Amitriptyline 25 mg provided significantly greater efficacy than placebo, with significant differences evident within the first week. There was no significant difference on mood scores between amitriptyline and placebo. The results suggest that surprisingly low doses of amitriptyline may be effective without substantial adverse effects, that the effect is evident early, and that the effect is distinguishable from any effect of the amitriptyline on mood.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A multiple dose comparison of combinations of ibuprofen and codeine and paracetamol, codeine and caffeine after third molar surgery.
In a randomised, double-blind, double-dummy, multiple dose, crossover study in 30 patients we compared an ibuprofen/codeine combination (400 mg ibuprofen/25.6 mg codeine phosphate) with a paracetamol/codeine/caffeine combination (1 g paracetamol/16 mg codeine phosphate/60 mg caffeine) for pain relief over 6 days after two-stage bilateral lower third molar removal. The ibuprofen combination produced significantly greater analgesia than the paracetamol combination, both on single-dose analysis of the first and second days and on multiple-dose measures for days 1, 2, 3 and 4. ⋯ This trial design (crossover with multiple dosing in outpatients) is a sensitive way of testing for analgesia, and is potentially more predictive of adverse effect problems than single-dose studies. It confirms that multiple dosing may show increased efficacy.