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NCT07457788
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of listening to nature sounds in a virtual reality forest on pain, vital signs, comfort, and patient satisfaction during chest tube removal. This study aims to determine whether there are significant differences in pain, comfort, patient satisfaction, and vital signs between the experimental and control groups during chest tube removal. "In this study, a VR video featuring a relaxing forest environment with nature sounds will be used with a virtual reality headset. Patients will be exposed to both auditory and visual stimuli. It is anticipated that the findings of this randomized controlled experimental study will make a significant contribution to the literature and clinical
NCT05046834
In this study, the effect of cold application used during and after chest tube removal on pain and vital signs in infants and children in the 0-3 age group will be examined.
NCT06531928
Since the removal of the chest tube is a painful procedure, it can cause serious anxiety in patients. Patients state that chest tube removal is among the bad memories they experience. The source of the anxiety may be related to fear and anxiety about the pain caused by the upcoming chest tube removal procedure, or it may be the words they have heard from other patients who have had this experience before. There are a limited number of studies in the literature on anxiety that may occur in patients due to chest tube withdrawal. In addition, studies in the literature did not focus on whether there was a difference between pre-procedure and post-procedure anxiety levels. In this study, it was aimed to investigate the anxiety levels before and after the procedure and the pain levels felt in the patients due to the procedure due to chest tube withdrawal in patients who underwent VATS. In addition, it aimed to investigate whether there is any correlation between pre-procedure anxiety and pain experienced during the procedure. If a correlation is detected, the importance of pre-procedural anxiety management will be better understood, the necessity of interventions such as psychological and pharmacological treatment for anxiety will come to the fore, and new research on this subject will be needed.
NCT04487262
Rationale: Evidence regarding the timing of chest tube removal after cardiac surgery is sparse. The timing of chest tubes removal constitutes a balancing act between risk of retained blood syndrome, infection, patient discomfort and opioid-related side effects. Several studies have shown that chest tubes can safely be removed on the first postoperative day compared to later. A single retrospective study raised concern as chest tube removal on the day of surgery was associated with an increased requirement of drainage of pleural effusions. Primary Objective: To compare the impact of two standard chest tube removal protocols following open-heart surgery on the incidence of pleural and/or pericardial effusion requiring invasive drainage Secondary Objectives To evaluate the impact of chest tube removal on the day of surgery (DAY0) compared to the first postoperative day (DAY1) regarding: * Comsumption of analgetic drugs * Early postoperative pain * Incidence of infection * Early postoperative respiratory function Study design: Single-center, open, parallel-group, prospective, cluster-randomized controlled trial Alternate assignment of chest tube removal according to Day 0 versus Day 1 protocol based upon the month of surgery (even versus odd months). Study population: 1300 consecutive patients undergoing elective open heart surgery in full or lower hemisternotomy with or without cardiopulmonary bypass including coronary artery bypass grafting, valve surgery, simple aortic surgery or combinations.
NCT00873587
There are two commonly used methods to remove chest tubes following thoracotomy. One is to remove the chest tube at maximum inspiration, (patient is asked to take a deep breath in and hold it), and the other is to pull the chest tube at maximum expiration,(patient is asked to blow out as much air as they can can and hold it). There has been considerable discussion among Thoracic surgeons that one of these two methods may decrease the risk of pneumothorax, the most common complication associated with chest tube removal. The investigators will compare the two methods, and also identify risk factors of developing pneumothorax during chest tube removal.