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Nursing Intervention Based on Stress Adaptation Theory for Patients Undergoing Diabetic Retinal Laser Surgery

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Summary

A randomized controlled study registered on ClinicalTrials.gov under NCT07544381 evaluates whether a nursing intervention based on stress adaptation theory improves pain trajectory and procedural tolerance in patients undergoing ambulatory retinal laser photocoagulation for diabetic retinal disease. Patients were randomized to receive routine peri-procedural care or routine care plus a structured nursing intervention including a brief treatment pause, guided slow breathing, anticipatory communication, real-time reassurance, and post-procedure observation. Outcomes measured include pain intensity, physiologic responses, procedural cooperation, and adverse events.

“Patients were randomized to receive either routine peri-procedural care or routine care plus a structured nursing intervention including a brief treatment pause, guided slow breathing, anticipatory communication, real-time reassurance, and post-procedure observation.”

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GovPing monitors ClinicalTrials.gov Studies for new healthcare & life sciences regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 676 changes logged to date.

What changed

This document is a ClinicalTrials.gov study registration entry for a randomized controlled trial evaluating nursing intervention based on stress adaptation theory in patients undergoing diabetic retinal laser photocoagulation. The study, registered with identifier NCT07544381 and dated April 22, 2026, compares routine peri-procedural care against routine care enhanced with structured nursing interventions including guided slow breathing, anticipatory communication, and post-procedure observation.

Healthcare providers, clinical investigators, and research institutions conducting diabetic eye-disease studies should note this as a registered trial in the ClinicalTrials.gov database. The study has no regulatory compliance obligations but provides information about ongoing research into patient comfort and tolerance during retinal laser procedures.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

← ClinicalTrials.gov Studies

Nursing Intervention Based on Stress Adaptation Theory for Patients Undergoing Diabetic Retinal Laser Surgery

N/A NCT07544381 Kind: NA Apr 22, 2026

Abstract

This randomized controlled study evaluated whether a nursing intervention based on stress adaptation theory could improve pain trajectory and procedural tolerance in patients undergoing ambulatory retinal laser photocoagulation for diabetic retinal disease. Patients were randomized to receive either routine peri-procedural care or routine care plus a structured nursing intervention including a brief treatment pause, guided slow breathing, anticipatory communication, real-time reassurance, and post-procedure observation. Outcomes included pain intensity, physiologic responses, procedural cooperation, and adverse events.

Conditions: Diabetic Retinopathy, Diabetic Retinal Disease

Interventions: Nursing Intervention Based on Stress Adaptation Theory, Routine Peri-Procedural Care

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Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Clinical investigators Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Healthcare research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Healthcare Medical Devices Pharmaceuticals

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