Premedication for Claustrophobic Patients for MRI Scan
Recruiting now NCT05876117
Run by Salem Anaesthesia Pain Clinic · for 20 to 99 · All sexes · accepts healthy volunteers
What this study is about
Claustrophobia is an irrational fear of restriction and suffocation. It is a specific phobia, according to DSM 5. Claustrophobic patients may fear that restriction of their limbs will hinder their ability to move quickly towards safety. MRI may trigger claustrophobia, because this diagnostic procedure involves a patient laying in a narrow tube. Premedication before MRI scan may occasionally reduce claustrophobia. Prospective observational crossover study of claustrophobic patients who are undergoing MRI scan. At alternate MRI scan sessions, each patient receives rotational premedication using Lorazepam 1mg; or Clonidine tablet 0.2mg; or combined Clonidine 0.2mg + Lorazepam 1mg. Patient will use Claustrophobia Questionnaire, a validated tool, to collect data on the days before and after each MRI scan. CLQ is a patient-administered tool used to assess claustrophobia. In addition, patient will use General Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire, a validated tool, to collect data on the days before and after each MRI scan. GAD-7 is a patient-administered tool that is used to assess anxiety.
Who can join (things the study team will check)
✅ You may be able to join if…
- diagnosed with claustrophobia
- previous incomplete MRI because of claustrophobia
- adult patients
- good treatment compliance
- reliable Claustrophobia Questionnaire (CLQ) diary
- reliable General Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire (GAD) diary
- informed consent for diary review
- consent for clinical record quality assurance review
🚫 You may not be able to join if…
- poor treatment compliance
- cognitive disorder
- inability to provide consent
- major neuropsychiatric disorder
- unreliable diary
- cannabis use
- excessive alcohol intake
- previous adverse/allergic reactions to clonidine
- previous adverse/allergic reactions to lorazepam
Where this trial is running
- Salem Anaesthesia Pain Clinic, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
Who to contact
Olu Bamgbade, MD,FRCPC · 17786286600 · salem.painclinic@gmail.com
It's completely normal to call and ask questions before deciding anything. Mention the study ID: NCT05876117.
Verify everything on the official ClinicalTrials.gov record. Page updated July 2026.