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Attention and Memory Disorders Related to Acute Morphine

Conditions
Memory Disorders
Interventions
Other: Two tests evaluating memory and attention
Registration Number
NCT03507985
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Toulouse
Brief Summary

The aim of the study is to determine if there are attention disorders related to acute morphine use in single-traumatized patients and after that the investigators will determine whether there are immediate memory problems associated with acute morphine withdrawal in single-traumatized patients.

From a biochemical point of view, the analgesic effects of morphine and the central side effects appear to be two different dimensions of the action of morphine, each related to a metabolite. Regarding acute attention, it is difficult to differentiate attention deficit disorder due to pain or due to morphine.

Two tests have been validated in the literature to evaluate attention and memory: the 15 words of Rey and the Stroop Color Word test. The investigators will use these two tests in this study.

Detailed Description

Morphine is a powerful analgesic used in chronic non-neuropathic cancerous (Walsh) and non-cancerous (Zenz et al) pain and for the relief of acute trauma pain, for example.

It is know that morphine as well as pain can cause cognitive disorders but the pain seems to slow down the reaction time whereas morphine has an action on the long-term memory (Lorenz J et al). According to an experimental study on rats, low dose morphine (equivalent to that present in the human brain) does not cause long-term memory problems, as opposed to a higher dose. In healthy volunteers, a single dose of morphine gives little cognitive and psychomotor dysfunction (Hank et al). After 12 months of taking oral morphine, no cognitive dysfunction is detected, with even some improvement for some functions related to stopping pain. More recently, it has been shown that long-term morphine use causes spatial memory disturbances and that these are probably due to extracellular adenosine accumulation.

This work suggests that acute morphine could lead to memory and attention disorders. This would therefore result in intrinsic impairment of the cognitive abilities of the patient and thus an alteration of his understanding in the explanations given concerning a possible surgical intervention, the risks and benefits of it.

The purpose of the study is to assess the patient's attention and memory skills after acute morphine use. In order to know their initial capacities, the tests are also done remotely outside the influence of the analgesic drugs given to the emergency services. The two practical tests, the Stroop Color Word Test and Rey's 15-word test, are easily performed tests in an emergency context and validated in the literature.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
118
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients over 18
  • Mono traumatized (suspicion of bone fracture) without vital distress, neurological, cardio-circulatory or pulmonary involvement
  • Analgesia obtained, defined by a pain score on a numerical scale ≤ 3/10 at the end of the treatment
  • Patient to be re-convened for plaster repair, control radiography or specialized consultation in the month following inclusion.
  • Patients presenting in an emergency department of Toulouse University Hospital
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients with vital distress, whatever the cause,
  • Traumatized cranial,
  • pre-existing labeled attention disorders (eg, diagnosed hyperactivity),
  • Pre-existing memory disorders labeled (eg, dementia)
  • Use of opioid analgesics other than morphine in the care of these patients
  • Chronic opiate users (licit or illicit)
  • Psychiatric disorders
  • Acute alcohol poisoning, voluntary drug poisoning or not, acute intoxication by drugs
  • Visual disorders (colorblind ..), patients who can not read

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
The unexposed groupTwo tests evaluating memory and attentionThe unexposed group where patients receive 1 +/- 2-stage analgesia is non-opioid analgesics. The patient will realise two tests evaluating memory and attention, for the first at the inclusion visit after giving his consent, and in a second time during the follow up visit 15 days or 1 month later.
The exposed groupTwo tests evaluating memory and attentionThe exposed group where patients receive morphine analgesia The patient will realise two tests evaluating memory and attention, for the first at the inclusion visit after giving his consent, and in a second time during the follow up visit 15 days or 1 month later.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The comparison of acute attention deficit according to the exposed or unexposed patient.1 month

The primary endpoint selected is the comparison of acute attention deficit according to the exposed or unexposed patient.

For each patient, the investigators will calculate the percentage of deficit between the Stroop Color Word test result at inclusion and at follow-up divided by the tracking score. This acute deficit is expressed as a percentage.

The primary endpoint selected is the comparison of acute attention deficit according to the exposed or unexposed patient.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The comparison of the acute memory deficit according to the exposed or unexposed nature of the patient1 month

The secondary endpoint chosen is the comparison of the acute memory deficit according to the exposed or unexposed nature of the patient.

For each patient, the aim is to calculate the percentage of deficit between the test result of the 15 words of Reys test at inclusion and during the follow-up divided by the tracking score. This acute deficit is expressed as a percentage.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University Hospital Toulouse

🇫🇷

Toulouse, France

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