Chronic Pain
Conditions
Keywords
pain treatment, analgesia, wounds, stages of treatment.
Brief summary
In 82.1% of patients with gunshot and mine-explosive wounds, pain becomes chronic, therefore, the study of the effectiveness of therapeutic tactics for pain relief in this category of patients at the stages of treatment will be important for improving the results of pain treatment.
Detailed description
The effectiveness of the therapeutic tactics of analgesia in patients with gunshot and mine-explosive wounds at the stages of treatment needs to be studied, because the subjective feelings and emotional experiences experienced by patients during the wounding in combat conditions through the prism of psychological disorders have their own characteristics. Given that in 82.1% of cases it is not possible to achieve a positive result of treatment, the data of our study will play an important role in their treatment.
Interventions
Data collection was carried out at all stages of treatment: medical and nursing brigade, military mobile hospital, military medical clinical center, during rehabilitation, within 12 months of the injury.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* the presence of gunshot wounds
Exclusion criteria
* no gunshot wounds
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| visual analog scale | 12 months | from 0 to 10 points |
| Didier Bouhassiraa DN4 | 12 months | 4 or more points (a neuropathic pain component is present) |
| The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | 12 months | 0-7 is the norm 8-13 - mild depressive disorders 14-18 - depressive disorders of medium severity 19-22 - severe depressive disorders 23 and more - depressive disorders of a very severe degree of severity |
| Chaban Quality of Life Scale | 12 months | up to 56 inclusive - a very low level 57-66 - low 67-75 - average 76-82 - tall 83-100 is very high |
| Mississippi PTSD scale (military version) | 12 months | the mean values of the total score are 76±18 for well-adjusted servicemen, 86±26 for servicemen with mental disorders, and 130±18 for those with PTSD |
Countries
Ukraine