Postoperative Pain
Conditions
Brief summary
Multimodal analgesia is used to control postoperative pain in hip surgery. Quadratus lumborum block is an effective regional anesthesia technique for hip and proximal femur surgery. The erector spinae plane block applied to the lumbar region was also reported to provide effective analgesia in these surgeons. In this study, we aimed to determine and compare the effects of quadratus lumborum block and lumbar erector spinae plane block on postoperative pain in hip and proximal femur surgeons.
Interventions
Lumbar ESP block will be performed at the begining of surgery under ganeral anesthesia. A convex ultrasound transducer will be placed in a longitudinal parasagittal orientation 4-6 cm lateral to L4 spinous process. The erector spinae muscles will be identified superficial to the tip of L4 transverse process. The patient's skin will be anesthetized with 2% lidocaine. A 22-gauge 10-cm needle will be inserted using an out-plane superior-to-inferior approach to place the tip into the fascial plane on the deep (anterior) aspect of erector spinae muscle. The location of the needle tip will be confirmed by visible fluid spread lifting erector spinae muscle off the bony shadow of the transverse process. A total of 40 mL of bupivacaine/lidocaine mixture will be injected.
QLB block will be performed at the begining of surgery under ganeral anesthesia. The convex transducer will be placed in the transverse plane on the flank of the patient cranial to the iliac crest.The 4th lumbar vertebral transverse process, erector spinae muscles, psoas muscles, transverse abdominis muscles, internal and external oblique muscles and the quadratus lumborum muscles will be identified. A 15cm 22G insulated needle will be inserted on the posterior corner of the convex probe. 40 ml of local anesthetic mixture(bupivacaine and lidocaine ) will be administered between the quadratus lumborum and psoas muscles into the fascial plane. We observed the local anesthetic pressing down on the psoas muscle in the ultrasound image.
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) pain score will be recorded from 20th minute in recovery room followed by 1.-3.-6.-12.-18.-24.hours. Intravenous meperidine administration at 0.5 mg / kg rescue analgesia was determined in patients with a NSR score of 6 and over in the postoperative collection room. It is planned that the patient will continue to follow the hourly NRS score in ward. Intramuscular diclofenac will be administered in this period if NRS 6 and if it is over, intravenous 0.5 mg / kg meperidine will be administered if NRS score is 6 or more after 2 hours. Salvage analgesic needs and times will be noted in detail, and the use of rescue analgesics, as well as NRS scores at designated hours, will be kept in a statistical evaluation.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
\- Hip joint and proxiaml femur surgery, ASA 1-2-3
Exclusion criteria
* Patient refusal * Contraindications to regional anesthesia * Known allergy to local anesthetics * Bleeding diathesis * Use of any anti-coagulants * Inability to provide informed consent * Severe kidney or liver disease * Inability to operate PCA system * Patient with psychiatric disorders
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Pain | 24 hours | Changes in Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) at rest and on movement will be recorded at intervals. NRS is a unidimensional measure of pain intensity in adults. The NRS is a segmented numeric version of the visual analog scale (VAS) in which a respondent selects a whole number (0-10 integers) that best reflects the intensity of his/her pain. The 11-point numeric scale ranges from '0' representing one pain extreme (e.g. no pain) to '10' representing the other pain extreme (e.g. pain as bad as you can imagine or worst pain imaginable). |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| analgesic consumption | 24 hours | Tramadol consumption in Patient Controlled Analgesia device and additional and rescue analgesic using |
Countries
Turkey (Türkiye)