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NCT07183345
Application of Dynamic Pain Assessment and Management System in Perioperative Period of Patients With Incarcerated Mixed Hemorrhoids
EARLY_PHASE1 trial testing Dynamic Pain Assessment and Management System in Incarcerated Mixed Hemorrhoids in 64 participants. Not yet recruiting.
1 June 2026
Quick facts
| Lead sponsor | The Affiliated Hospital of Putian University |
|---|---|
| Phase | EARLY_PHASE1 |
| Status | Not yet recruiting |
| Study type | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Allocation | randomized |
| Design | parallel |
| Masking | none |
| Primary purpose | other |
| Enrollment | 64 |
| Start date | 1 December 2025 |
| Primary completion | 1 June 2026 |
| Estimated completion | 1 September 2026 |
| Sites | 1 location across China |
Drugs / interventions tested
- Dynamic Pain Assessment and Management System
- Routine drug analgesia — full drug profile →
Conditions studied
- Incarcerated Mixed Hemorrhoids — all drugs for Incarcerated Mixed Hemorrhoids →
Sponsor
The Affiliated Hospital of Putian University
Who can join
Adults 18 to 75, any sex, with Incarcerated Mixed Hemorrhoids. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.
Sponsor's own description
This study aims to investigate whether the dynamic pain assessment and management system can alleviate postoperative pain in patients with incarcerated mixed hemorrhoids and reduce the incidence of complications. A total of 64 eligible patients were enrolled and randomly divided into two groups, with the specific grouping and intervention methods as follows: ① Control Group: Routine drug analgesia and conventional nursing education were adopted. ② Study Group: Patients were managed with the dynamic pain assessment and management system, which included preoperative administration of analgesic drugs, postoperative traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) fumigation, wrist-ankle acupuncture for pain relief, and personalized nursing education. The study evaluated the effect of the dynamic pain assessment and management system on postoperative analgesia by comparing the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) scores for pain, recording the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores for quality of life, and analyzing the incidence of complications among patients in different groups. The primary hypothesis of the study is that, compared with routine pain management methods, the dynamic pain assessment and management system can significantly reduce postoperative pain in patients, improve their quality of life, and decrease the incidence of complications (such as bleeding and urinary retention).
Publications & conference data
No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial.
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- NCT07340307 — Application Effects of Wrist-Ankle Acupuncture in Patients With Different Types of Pain Following Perianal Surgery · NA · recruiting
- NCT07183332 — Comparison of Clinical Effects Between Routine and High-frequency Follow-up After Hemorrhoids Surgery · NA · not yet recruiting
Verify against primary sources
- ClinicalTrials.gov — authoritative US registry record
- WHO ICTRP — international registry index
- EU Clinical Trials Register
- Sponsor press releases (Google)
- Trial protocol + status: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT07183345 (US National Library of Medicine, public domain)
- Drug + disease cross-links: matched in real time against Drug Landscape's normalised drug + company + condition tables
- Sponsor: as reported to ClinicalTrials.gov by The Affiliated Hospital of Putian University
- Last refreshed: 5 December 2025
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