Efficacy of Gabapentin vs. Placebo for Adjuvant Pain Control Following Acute Rib Fractures
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Chronic Pain |
Therapuetic Areas: | Musculoskeletal |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 65 |
Updated: | 10/28/2018 |
Start Date: | October 2016 |
End Date: | October 23, 2018 |
A Multicenter, Randomized Controlled Trial of the Efficacy of Gabapentin vs. Placebo for Adjuvant Pain Control Following Acute Rib Fractures
A Multi-center, Randomized Controlled Trial of the Efficacy of Gabapentin vs. Placebo for
Adjutant Pain Control Following Acute Rib Fractures.
Adjutant Pain Control Following Acute Rib Fractures.
Traumatic rib fractures are a tremendous source of pain which can limit respiratory function
and overall recovery. Numerous multimodal pain management strategies have been employed with
varying success; however, narcotics remain the mainstay of treatment. Beyond the acute side
effects of narcotics, including altered mental status, depression of respiratory drive, and
constipation, there is a substantial risk of long term dependency. Recently, loco-regional
blockade and non-narcotic adjuncts have received increasing support within the literature.
Gabapentin has been used extensively as a non-narcotic adjunct to analgesia regimens in the
acute and chronic settings, however its ability to better control pain secondary to traumatic
rib fractures has never been studied .
The primary aim is to assess the efficacy of gabapentin as an analgesic after rib fractures.
Secondary aims are to assess the effect on pulmonary function and other known complications
following rib fractures.
The hypothesis is gabapentin will improve pain control as measured by lower pain scores and
lower narcotic needs. The investigators plan to test this hypothesis by recruiting trauma
patients with rib fractures, and randomly assign them to gabapentin versus a placebo.
and overall recovery. Numerous multimodal pain management strategies have been employed with
varying success; however, narcotics remain the mainstay of treatment. Beyond the acute side
effects of narcotics, including altered mental status, depression of respiratory drive, and
constipation, there is a substantial risk of long term dependency. Recently, loco-regional
blockade and non-narcotic adjuncts have received increasing support within the literature.
Gabapentin has been used extensively as a non-narcotic adjunct to analgesia regimens in the
acute and chronic settings, however its ability to better control pain secondary to traumatic
rib fractures has never been studied .
The primary aim is to assess the efficacy of gabapentin as an analgesic after rib fractures.
Secondary aims are to assess the effect on pulmonary function and other known complications
following rib fractures.
The hypothesis is gabapentin will improve pain control as measured by lower pain scores and
lower narcotic needs. The investigators plan to test this hypothesis by recruiting trauma
patients with rib fractures, and randomly assign them to gabapentin versus a placebo.
Inclusion Criteria:
- > 1 rib fractures
- Requiring hospital admission
- Enrolled within 24 hours of injury
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnancy
- Intubation
- Age <18, age >65
- Inability to tolerate PO medication
- Patient refusal
- Inability to obtain consent from patient or surrogate
- Renal or Hepatic impairment
- Allergy or Hypersensitivity to gabapentin or any component of the formulation
We found this trial at
1
site
777 Bannock St
Denver, Colorado 80204
Denver, Colorado 80204
(303) 436-6000

Principal Investigator: Fredric M Pieracci, MD, MPH
Phone: 303-436-4029
Denver Health Medical Center Denver Health is a comprehensive, integrated organization providing level one care...
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