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Randomized clinical trial to compare the length of postoperative hospital stay and early morbidity for fast track care versus traditional care after open appendectomy

Randomized clinical trial to compare the length of postoperative hospital stay and early morbidity for fast track care versus traditional care after open appendectomy

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ANZCTR
Registry ID
ACTRN12607000215426
Enrollment
68
Registered
2007-04-20
Start date
2005-06-05
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2020-01-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

None listed

Brief summary

The primary aim of the study: to determine if fast track care protocol which consists on early postoperative oral feeding and opioid-sparing analgesia is safe, feasible and beneficial. Based on the earlier studues on fast track protocol after colorectal surgery we hypothetized that it will safe and beneficial after appendectomy

Interventions

Fast track protocol consist on 1. preoperative counselling consists of two sessions of 5 minutes duration each: the first after examination and qualification a patient for the appendectomy, and the second before signing a consent 2. early postoperative oral feeding commenced 6 hours after operation and gradually increased from 30 ml of fluids every hour to solid diet as tolerated by a patient 3. opioid-sparing analgesia (paracetamol started 1g per rectum applied immediately after operation and

Fast track protocol consist on 1. preoperative counselling consists of two sessions of 5 minutes duration each: the first after examination and qualification a patient for the appendectomy, and the second before signing a consent 2. early postoperative oral feeding commenced 6 hours after operation and gradually increased from 30 ml of fluids every hour to solid diet as tolerated by a patient 3. opioid-sparing analgesia (paracetamol started 1g per rectum applied immediately after operation and followed by oral 1g 6-8 hourly + indomethacin oral, 25mg 8 hourly, pethidine parenterally, 1mg per kilogram of body weight only if needed as a rescue analgesia Patients were discharged when passed flatus or stools and tolerate solid diet, and had no complications requiring hospitalization. Patients were observed in the study until discharge from the hospital and were followed up on 7th postoperative day for complications.

Sponsors

Divine Word University
Lead SponsorUniversity

Study design

Allocation
Randomised controlled trial
Intervention model
Parallel
Primary purpose
Treatment
Masking
Open (masking not used)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
All
Age
10 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

all consecutive patients who underwent open appendectomy; obtained informed written consent

Exclusion criteria

No consent obtained, age < 10 years, pregnancy Exit criteria: withdrowal of the consent,noncompliance with the protocol.

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ANZCTR · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026