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Clinical Trials/NCT00489684
NCT00489684
Completed
N/A

Investigation of the Effect of Opioids on Experimental Hyperalgesia in Oesophagus and Skin, and in an Ischemic Model of Musclepain. Including an Explorative Study of the Effect of Morphine on the Pain Processing in the Brain

University of Aarhus1 site in 1 country24 target enrollmentAugust 2007
ConditionsPain

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Pain
Sponsor
University of Aarhus
Enrollment
24
Locations
1
Status
Completed
Last Updated
17 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The study is a multi-modal multi-tissue human experimental pain study in 24 healthy volunteers. The study is a randomized cross-over study. The effect of 2 opioids will be compared on pain stimuli in skin, muscle an oesophagus. Hyperalgesia will be induced in skin and oesophagus, to sensitize these tissues. The pain thresholds before and after opioid administration will be compared. The hypothesis is that the difference in effect of the opioids is more pronounced in the presence of hyperalgesia. As hyperalgesia is a common phenomenon the clinic, the findings in this study may lead to a better understanding of the treatment of pain. The study will include an explorative study of the effect of Morphine of pain processing in the brain, this will provide us with new insight in the effect of the opioids of pain processing in the brain.

Detailed Description

The study is a multi-modal multi-tissue human experimental pain study in 24 healthy volunteers. The study is a randomized cross-over study. The effect of 2 opioids, Oxycodone and Morphine will be compared on pain stimuli in skin, muscle an oesophagus. Hyperalgesia will be induced in skin by capsaicin and in oesophagus by a mixture of capsaicin and acid, to sensitize these tissues. The pain thresholds before and after opioid administration will be compared. The hypothesis is that the difference in effect of the opioids is more pronounced in the presence of hyperalgesia. As hyperalgesia is a common phenomenon the clinic, the findings in this study may lead to a better understanding of the treatment of pain. The study will include an explorative study of the effect of Morphine of pain processing in the brain, this will provide us with new insight in the effect of the opioids of pain processing in the brain.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
August 2007
End Date
March 2008
Last Updated
17 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Between 18 and 65 years
  • Signed informed concent
  • Women must use a safe contraceptive method
  • Negative pregnancy test

Exclusion Criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Allergy to study medication
  • Participating in another medicine study
  • Previous addictive behaviour
  • Need for other treatments
  • Use of strong analgesics
  • Use of any analgesics 24 hours before the study

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Not specified

Study Sites (1)

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