IRB Approved Circle: Ketamine Infusion For Pain Management In Certain Spine Surgeries
October 17, 2023
IRB Approved Circle: Ketamine Infusion For Pain Management In Certain Spine Surgeries
Peri-operative ketamine infusion has been shown to decrease post-operative pain from surgeries such as cervical and lumbar fusions. There is also evidence that ketamine infusions can help to improve levels of chronic pain, reducing the need for opioid medications.
Dr. Jessica Jameson as principal investigator is using Circles for a Phase IV clinical trial to help determine whether a pre-operative ketamine infusion will decrease post-operative analgesic and opioid consumption similar to that experienced with intra-operative ketamine. Dr. Jameson is board certified in anesthesiology and pain medicine. She practices at the Axis Spine Center, part of the Northwest Specialty Hospital. She has acted as a principal investigator and co-investigator on many clinical trials.
Circles are competitive with much more expensive clinical research platforms. Moreover, integrated Circles processes handle IRB support, patient enrollment, long-term outcomes capture, report generation, publication, co-investigator administration and other trial elements. Circles also enable, if Dr. Jameson wishes, the efficient addition of co-investigators and extension of the trial’s scope, duration and/or other parameters.
More information on the trial protocol can be found in this article and at ClinicalTrials.gov (ID NCT06066879).
Please contact us for more information on the use of Circles for clinical trials.
IRB Approved Circle: Ketamine Infusion For Pain Management In Certain Spine Surgeries
October 17, 2023
Peri-operative ketamine infusion has been shown to decrease post-operative pain from surgeries such as cervical and lumbar fusions. There is also evidence that ketamine infusions can help to improve levels of chronic pain, reducing the need for opioid medications.
Dr. Jessica Jameson as principal investigator is using Circles for a Phase IV clinical trial to help determine whether a pre-operative ketamine infusion will decrease post-operative analgesic and opioid consumption similar to that experienced with intra-operative ketamine. Dr. Jameson is board certified in anesthesiology and pain medicine. She practices at the Axis Spine Center, part of the Northwest Specialty Hospital. She has acted as a principal investigator and co-investigator on many clinical trials.
Circles are competitive with much more expensive clinical research platforms. Moreover, integrated Circles processes handle IRB support, patient enrollment, long-term outcomes capture, report generation, publication, co-investigator administration and other trial elements. Circles also enable, if Dr. Jameson wishes, the efficient addition of co-investigators and extension of the trial’s scope, duration and/or other parameters.
More information on the trial protocol can be found in this article and at ClinicalTrials.gov (ID NCT06066879).
Please contact us for more information on the use of Circles for clinical trials.