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NCT07545655: Ultrasound-Guided Scalp Block Reduces Opioid Use, Improves Hemodynamic Stability, and Decreases Inflammation in Craniotomy Patients

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Summary

A registered observational study (NCT07545655, registered April 22, 2026) examined craniotomy patients using a skull pin head holder and found that an ultrasound-guided scalp block reduced perioperative opioid consumption, improved hemodynamic stability, and decreased the inflammatory response. The study falls under ClinicalTrials.gov, a clinical trial registry operated by the National Institutes of Health.

“This study shows that in craniotomy patients using a skull pin head holder, an ultrasound-guided scalp block reduces perioperative opioid consumption, improves hemodynamic stability, and decreases the inflammatory response.”

NIH , verbatim from source
Published by NIH on changeflow.com . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

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 — 686 changes logged to date.

What changed

This document is a ClinicalTrials.gov registration entry for an observational study (NCT07545655) investigating the effects of ultrasound-guided scalp block in craniotomy patients using a skull pin head holder. The study's findings indicate reductions in perioperative opioid consumption, improved hemodynamic stability, and decreased inflammatory response. Registered on April 22, 2026, this entry is informational in nature and does not create compliance obligations for any party.

Affected parties include researchers conducting perioperative pain management studies, anesthesiologists performing craniotomies, and healthcare institutions offering neurosurgical services. No regulatory action, enforcement, or compliance requirement is associated with this clinical trial registration.

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

Effects of Ultrasound-Guided Scalp Block on Opioid Use, Hemodynamics, and Postoperative Inflammation in Craniotomy

Observational NCT07545655 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 22, 2026

Abstract

This study shows that in craniotomy patients using a skull pin head holder, an ultrasound-guided scalp block reduces perioperative opioid consumption, improves hemodynamic stability, and decreases the inflammatory response.

Conditions: Craniotomy Surgery

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Published
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Perioperative pain management research Neurosurgical outcomes research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Pharmaceuticals Medical Devices

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