RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT05779852

Pain Management of Amputation Wounds With AutoHypnosis


Sponsor

Rennes University Hospital

Enrollment

44 participants

Start Date

Jun 29, 2023

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Amputation in vascular surgery mainly concerns the lower limb and is often linked to Obliterative Arterial Disease of the Lower Limbs. It indicates the impossibility or failure of revascularisation after an exhaustive assessment aimed at saving the limb. It is also performed to limit the spread of gangrene, an affection of the limb that can evolve into septicaemia. The principle is to amputate in a healthy and vascularised area to allow good healing of the amputation stump. Amputations of one, several or all toes, called complete transmetatarsal amputations, may take several months to heal. Amputations require directed healing and, above all, monitoring of the underlying tissues of the amputated area by daily detersions and wiping performed by a nurse at home. The mechanical detersion of the wound necessary for the healing process and cell migration, as well as optimal deep meshing, facilitate the evolution of the healing process. These treatments often cause pain, despite oral analgesics and local anaesthetics prior to the treatment. For several years, studies have shown the benefits of hypnosis in modifying the perception of pain, particularly during treatment. Studies have also shown that self-hypnosis allows a reduction in the intensity of pain. The clinical experience of the vascular surgery department of the University Hospital of Rennes suggests that patients who use self-hypnosis during the daily dressing of their amputation experience the moment more serenely, increasing their comfort and decreasing their pain and anxiety.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study tests whether autohypnosis — a self-directed relaxation and dissociation technique — can help manage pain during dressing changes after toe amputation. Amputation of one or more toes, often necessary due to diabetic complications or vascular disease, leaves wounds requiring regular, often painful dressing changes. Pain management in this context typically relies on opioids or nerve blocks, both of which carry risks and side effects. Hypnosis offers a non-pharmacological alternative that patients can learn to use independently. Eligible participants are adults aged 18 and over who have had one or more toes amputated within the last 24 hours for the first time, report pain of at least 3 out of 10 during their first dressing change, and are covered by social security. People with cognitive impairment, prior hypnosis practice, bipolar disorder, decompensated schizophrenia, chronic non-vascular pain, pre-existing morphine use, pregnancy, or perineural catheter analgesia are excluded. Participants learn autohypnosis techniques and use them during dressing changes, with pain scores compared against a standard care group. This research is important because wound care in diabetic and vascular patients often spans weeks to months — if patients can use self-hypnosis effectively, they gain a powerful, free, always-available tool that could meaningfully reduce their suffering and dependence on strong painkillers.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

OTHERself-hypnosis and dressing

self-hypnosis during dressing

OTHERdressing

dressing without self-hypnosis


Locations(1)

CHU Rennes

Rennes, France

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NCT05779852


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