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Continuous Femoral and Tibial Nerve Blocks in TKA Patients

A Prospective, Randomized Study Comparing Continuous Femoral and Tibial Nerve Blocks vs. Continuous Femoral and Single Shot Sciatic Nerve Block in Total Knee Arthroplasties.

Status
Terminated
Phases
Early Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01680692
Enrollment
2
Registered
2012-09-07
Start date
2012-08-31
Completion date
2014-03-31
Last updated
2018-04-25

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

Conditions

Analgesia in Total Knee Arthroplasty

Keywords

Analgesia TKA, Total knee arthroplasty, Continuous femoral catheter, Continuous tibial catheter, Single shot sciatic

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether a new regional anesthesia technique would provide better pain control, patient satisfaction, less narcotic use and no symptoms of foot drop after knee replacement surgery.

Detailed description

The aim of this study is to compare and measure the effects of Ropivicaine given through catheters located in the femoral and tibial nerves on indices of sensory blockade after total knee arthroplasties. This is a randomized, prospective study designed to address the primary research question: Does placing a continuous femoral & tibial catheter infusion lead to superior analgesia and patient satisfaction during the entire hospital stay? The secondary research question is: Will selectively placing a continuous tibial catheter decrease the episodes of transient foot drop to zero? Investigators know from own regional institutional practices that by performing a continuous femoral with a single shot sciatic nerve block provides adequate analgesia of the entire leg, but by post-operative day 2 patient's begin to experience pain with rehabilitation and rest in the posterior-lateral aspect of the knee and leg secondary to wearing off of the sciatic nerve block anesthetic. Also, it is known that by blocking the sciatic nerve proximal to its bifurcation may lead to episodes of transient foot drop due to common peroneal nerve blockage and irritation. It is hypothesized that placement of continuous catheters in the femoral and tibial nerves would provide better analgesia and lead to no episodes of foot drop as compared to the patients that receive continuous femoral and single shot sciatic blocks. Currently at Texas Tech Health Science Center-El Paso and University Medical Center, about 95% of patient's undergoing total knee arthroplasty's (TKAs) receives a continuous femoral infusion and a single shot sciatic with an initial bolus of 30mL (femoral) and 20mL (sciatic) of Ropivicaine 0.5% and an infusion of Ropivicaine 0.2% at a rate of 10cc/hr (usually started post-op) for at least the first 48-72 hours post-operatively. For our study, Orthopedic clinic will provide a copy of the consent form to the subject so that they can review it, and if interested in participating in the study, the patient can then contact the Principal Investigator or Study Coordinator directly. After informed consent is obtained, patients will be randomized during that time using a numbering system enclosed in sealed envelopes. Group 1 will receive a pre-operative continuous femoral catheter and a post-operative single shot sciatic with both given an initial bolus of 30 mL (femoral) 0.5% Ropivicaine and 20mL (sciatic) 0.2% Ropivicaine. Following surgery the femoral infusion will be started, which will be running Ropivicaine 0.2 at 10cc/hr. Group 2 will receive a pre-operative continuous femoral catheter and a post-operative continuous tibial catheter with an initial bolus of 30 mL 0.5% Ropivicaine (femoral) and 20mL 0.2% Ropivicaine (tibial), which will be followed by infusions post-operatively running at the same rate and dosage as group 1. All nerve blocks performed will be placed using a nerve stimulator (with no twitches lower than 0.2mA) under ultrasound-guidance. Proper catheter placement will be confirmed by injecting 3mL of air and visualizing by ultrasound. Once confirmed, the bolus dose as mentioned earlier of either Ropivicaine 0.5% (femoral) or 0.2% (sciatic/tibial) will be injected. All TKA cases will be performed under general anesthesia with laryngeal mask airway. Considering the fact that by placing a selective continuous tibial catheter pre-operatively, we run the risk of the catheter being the surgical field during the case. For this reason, it was decided that placement after the procedure would be best. Therefore, the patient will be taken back to the block room post-operatively and a continuous tibial nerve catheter or single shot (depending on what group assigned) will be placed and bolused using the same technique as previously described. To detect a 30% reduction in the pain score from 3-4 to a 1-2 would be required for an observed post-operative pain control difference. In order to achieve a statistically significant result to detect the previously observed difference, a sample of 38 patients in each group (total of 76) would be required. Assuming a high consent rate and given the fact many TKA's it is projected that this study can be completed in approximately 12 months.

Interventions

Infusion of local anesthetic for post-operative analgesia.

DEVICEContinuous Femoral Nerve Catheter

Continuous femoral nerve catheter placed to deliver infusions of local anesthetic post-operatively.

DEVICEContinuous Tibial Nerve Catheter

Continuous infusion of local anesthetic delivered through a tibial nerve catheter post-operatively.

Sponsors

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
CollaboratorOTHER
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Adult patients (18-85 years old) undergoing elective total knee arthroplasty's * American Society of Anesthesiology Classification (ASA) 1, 2, or 3

Exclusion criteria

* Patient refusal * Under 18 * Pregnancy * Presence of neurological disease or existing parasthesia * Diabetes * Chronic drug use * Infection of leg * American Society of Anesthesiology Classification (ASA) 4-6 (unstable conditions) * History of allergy to local anesthetics or opioids

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Post-Operative AnalgesiaPatients pain score will be evaluated after surgery until discharge, an average of 3 to 4 days.Will measure pain using visual analog scale.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Foot DropEvaluated in the first 24, 48, 72 hours prior to discharge.Daily lower extremity neurological examination of the foot (specifically dorsiflexion.

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Patient SatisfactionEvaluated every 24, 48 and 72 hours prior to discharge.Patient satisfaction assessed using a daily numeric scale form (1-5 with 5 being most satisfied).
Opioid ConsumptionEvaluated every 24, 48, 72 hours prior to discharge.Compare the total consumption of opioid use in study patients compared to control patients.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026