Comparative Efficacy of IV Dexamethasone vs. Nebulized Salbutamol for Renal Colic Pain in the ED
Status:
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Trial end date:
2028-03-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Adult patients (18-55 years of age) with clinical diagnosis of acute renal colic (sudden sharp colic flank pain with or without radiation to genitalia or groin and with or without urinary symptoms) who had pain score of 5 or more measured by 10-cm visual analogue scale (VAS), will be included. Will be excluded those who had history of cardiovascular, hepatic, renal or metabolic diseases, patients with evidence of sepsis or clinical suspicion of urinary tract infection, hemodynamically unstable patients (systolic blood pressure \<90 mmHg), patients with uncontrolled diabetes, pregnancy, breastfeeding, patients unable to understand verbal and/or written information, patients receiving analgesics within 6 hours before presentation, serum potassium less than 3.7 mmol/l, concomitant use of any beta blockers (including beta-blocker containing eye drops), prolonged-release long-acting -agonists, use of short-acting 2-agonists within the 6 h preceding presentation to the emergency department, any contraindication to the use of salbutamol, history of drug dependence or chronic consumption of alcohol. Will be also excluded patients with known allergy to paracetamol or salbutamol, patients with abdominal tenderness as a sign of peritoneal inflammation and those with any clinical suspicion for diseases other than urolithiasis, including abdominal aortic aneurysm or dissection.