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Intrathecal Neostigmine for Prevention of PDPH

The Efficacy of Neostigmine as an Adjuvant to Bupivacaine for Intrathecal Block in Reducing the Incidence and Severity of Post-Dural Puncture Headache for Parturients Scheduled for Elective Caesarean Section

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03587441
Enrollment
240
Registered
2018-07-16
Start date
2018-08-04
Completion date
2019-02-10
Last updated
2019-07-15

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

Conditions

Post-Dural Puncture Headache

Keywords

postural headache, intrathecal neostigmine for prevention of PDPH

Brief summary

Neuraxial blocks continue to be the cornerstone of anesthesia and postoperative analgesia for normal vaginal delivery and elective caesarean section due to its approved safety and efficiency for decades. Post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) is still one of the most common complications of neuraxial anesthetic techniques. The headache could be severe and limit the activities of the new mother to care for her baby, prolong hospital stay. PDPH is defined as a headache that develops within five days of dural puncture and can't be attributed to any other types of headache and mostly is postural in character. Neostigmine methylsulfate is a synthetic carbamic acid ester which reversibly inhibits the enzyme Acetylcholine esterase (AChE) that makes more Acetylcholine molecules available at cholinergic receptors. Neostigmine is used in anesthesia mainly as a reversal for non-depolarizing neuromuscular agents. Intrathecal (IT) neostigmine was tried as an adjuvant to local anesthetics in IT block for elective cesarean sections to decrease local anesthetic consumption and to prolong postoperative analgesia. Side effects of IT neostigmine are dose-dependent with doses more than 25 µg especially nausea and vomiting and could be decreased by increasing the baricities of the local anesthetic solutions and by early head up position after IT injection. However, its effect on PDPH was not investigated before in literature. Parturients will be randomly assigned into one of two groups: the intervention group will receive 20 µg with IT Bupivacaine and the control group will receive an equivalent volume of dextrose 5% with the IT Bupivacaine. The objective of the current study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of IT neostigmine as an adjuvant to bupivacaine in reducing the incidence and severity of post-dural puncture headache in parturients scheduled for an elective cesarean section.

Detailed description

The study will be performed from July 2018 to July 2019 at Fayoum University hospital after approval of the local institutional ethics committee and local institutional review board. The study design will be prospective, randomized, double-blind, parallel groups, placebo-controlled clinical trial. A detailed informed consent will be signed by the eligible participants before recruitment and randomization. Randomization will be done by using computer-generated random numbers that will be placed in separate opaque envelopes that will be opened by study investigators just before IT block. Neither the participants, the study investigators, the attending clinicians, nor the data collectors will be aware of groups' allocation until the study end. The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) recommendations for reporting randomized, controlled clinical trials will be followed. Preoperative preparations and Premedication: The study solutions will be prepared in a one milliliter syringe as following: For the intervention group (N), it will contain 20 µg of Neostigmine® (0.5 mg/ml ampules manufactured by Amriya for pharmaceutical industries in Alexandria, Egypt) neostigmine ampule will be diluted in 4 ml dextrose 5% to make a solution of 100 µg/ml, 0.2 ml of this solution will be used, while in the control group an equal volume (0.2 ml) of dextrose 5% will be prepared. The syringes used will be labeled as A and B per their content. The identical coded syringe will be prepared by trained anesthesia technicians who will not be included in the study. All parturients will receive 150 mg Ranitidine oral tablet on the night before and on the morning of the operation as a premedication. Intraoperative technique and management: Upon arrival to the operating room standard monitors (Pulse oximeter, Noninvasive blood pressure monitoring, and Electrocardiogram) will be applied and continued all over the operation, an eighteen gauge (18G) peripheral intravenous (IV) cannula will be inserted, and 10 ml/kg of Ringer lactate solution warmed to 37°C will be infused over 15 minutes as a preload. IT block will be performed via a midline approach into the L4-5 interspaces in sitting position with complete aseptic condition using a 25 gauge Quincke spinal needle after giving 3 ml of lidocaine 2% (60 mg) as a subcutaneous infiltration. After confirming free cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow through the needle a 2.5 ml of hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.5 % in addition to the content of the prepared study syringe will be slowly injected. Then, the parturient will be immediately placed in the supine position with 15° left tilt, and an oxygen mask will be applied at 2 l/min. After ensuring sufficient anesthesia level, the surgical procedure will start with continuous hemodynamics monitoring and recording. If the systolic blood pressure (SBP) decreased to 20% below the baseline or less than 90 mmHg, ephedrine 5 mg will be administered intravenously. Also, if heart rate (HR) will be less than 50 beats/min, atropine sulfate 0.5 mg will be administered intravenously. Any intraoperative or postoperative nausea or vomiting will be managed with 10 mg of metoclopramide Upon delivery of the fetus, ten units of oxytocin will be given by IV infusion, and if the uterus is not well contracted, additional increments of 5 units will be added accordingly. One gm of Ceftriaxone will be also given after delivery of the fetus by IV infusion. Postoperative monitoring, Pain control and follow up: At the end of surgery, Participant will be transferred to postoperative anesthesia care unit (PACU) with standard monitoring applied. All Participants will receive 75 mg diclofenac sodium intramuscular every 12 hours as a pain management per institution policy, 1,23 4 mg of morphine will be given IV if rescue analgesia is needed postoperatively every 10 minutes with a maximum of 20 mg in 6 hours or 32 mg in 24 hours. The participant will be transferred to obstetrics ward after fulfilling the criteria of modified Aldrete scoring system. 24 Assessment for post-dural puncture headache and other associated symptoms will be done from day 0 to day five postoperatively and if the participant will be discharged home, follow up will be done by a phone call. If there will be a complaint of a headache, the participant will be asked to come back to the hospital for proper assessment and management either on an outpatient or inpatient bases per the headache severity. The participants who will be diagnosed to have PDPH per the criteria of the International Headache Society (HIS) will be treated by using oral medications Panadol extra™ (paracetamol 1gm + caffeine 130 mg) (Manufactured by: Alexandria company for pharmaceuticals & chemical industries under license: GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare Ltd. Ireland) at 6-hour interval in addition to hydration and bed rest. Severe Intractable headache (VAS ≥ 40) persistent for more than 48 hours with no response to conservative measures will be managed with an epidural blood patch after participant approval and consent signing. Statistical analysis and sample size estimation: Continuous variables will be tested for normal distribution by the Shapiro-Wilk test (P ≤ 0.05). Parametric data will be expressed as mean and standard deviation (SD) and analyzed by using the independent t-test. Data with kurtosis or skewness will be depicted as median and interquartile range and compared for significant difference by implementation of Mann-Whitney U test. Categorical variables will be presented as numbers and frequencies and the chi-square test or Fisher exact test will be used to analyze the significant differences between the two arms. A P value ≤ 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. Data will be analyzed using SPSS (SPSS 16.0, SPSS Inc., Chicago, II, USA). The sample size calculation based on that a 15 % reduction in the incidence of PDPH between the two arms could be of clinically important relevance. The reported incidence of PDPH with the use of 25 gauge Quincke needle is 25 %. Sample size of 100 participants per group were found sufficient assuming (two tail) α = 0.05, β = 0.2 (80 % power), and 1:1 allocation ratio. We will plan to recruit 120 participants per group to account for data loss or protocol violation. The sample size calculation performed with G\*Power software version 3.1.9.2 (Institute of Experimental Psychology, Heinrich Heine University, Dusseldorf, Germany).

Interventions

20 µg Neostigmine Methylsulfate intrathecal in 0.2 ml of Dextrose 5% solution

intrathecal

Sponsors

Fayoum University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
20 Years to 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* American society association (ASA) physical status II parturients who will be scheduled for an elective caesarean section by IT anesthesia

Exclusion criteria

* significant renal, hepatic, and cardiovascular diseases * pre-eclampsia * any contraindication to regional anesthesia such as local infection or bleeding disorders * allergy to neostigmine * long-term opioid use * a history of chronic pain, migraine, cluster headache * digestive problems with nausea or vomiting * cognitive or memory disorders * history of urinary retention; bronchial asthma * perioperative blood transfusion

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
incidence of post-dural puncture headacheAt day 5 from intrathecal blockany headache that develops within five days of dural puncture and can't be attributed to any other types of headache and mostly is postural in character

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Visual analog score of post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) at presentationAt 24 hours after headache onsetSeverity of PDPH at presentation estimated by visual analog score (VAS) (where 0 = no headache, and 100 = worst imaginable headache)
Visual analog score of post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) after medical treatmentAt 48 hours after starting medical treatmentSeverity of PDPH after 48 hours from receiving medical treatment estimated by visual analog score (VAS) (where 0 = no headache, and 100 = worst imaginable headache)
highest Visual analog score of post-dural puncture headacheAt 48 hours after starting medical treatmentSeverity of PDPH estimated by visual analog score (VAS) (where 0 = no headache, and 100 = worst imaginable headache)
Percent of participants with neck stiffnessAt 48 hours after headache onsetincidence of neck stiffness in participants with PDPH in each group
Percent of participants in need for epidural blood patchAfter 48 hours from onset of headacheSevere Intractable headache (VAS ≥ 40) persistent for more than 48 hours with no response to conservative measures will be managed with an epidural blood patch after participant approval and consent signing
Percent of participants complained from intraoperative nausea and vomitingFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursAny intraoperative nausea or vomiting related to intrathecal neostigmine injection
Percent of participants complained from postoperative nausea and vomitingAT 48 hours after PDPHAny postoperative nausea or vomiting related to PDPH
incidence of urine retentionAt 48 hours from intrathecal blockpostoperative inability to pass urine
incidence of memory and cognitive disordersAt 48 hours from intrathecal blockany observed or complained memory or cognitive disorders
incidence of hypotensionFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hourssystolic blood pressure (≤ 20 % of baseline level or \< 90 mmhg
ephedrine requirementsFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursephedrine used measured in milligrams
incidence of desaturationFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hours(SPO2 \< 92 %)
total analgesic consumptionAt 24 hour after intrathecal blockamount of morphine used in milligrams
incidence of bradycardiaFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursheart rate \< 50 beat per minute
atropine requirementsFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursatropine used measured in milligrams
incidence of shiveringFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursany shivering
time to the first requirement of analgesic supplementFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hourscalculated in minutes
the assessment of duration of sensory blockadeFrom intrathecal block until the first appearance of pain at the T10 dermatome, assessed up to 24 hoursmeasured in minutes, assessed by a pinprick test
the assessment of duration of motor blockadeFrom intrathecal block until the modified Bromage score will be zero, assessed up to 24 hoursmeasured in minutes, assessed by the modified Bromage score (0, no motor loss; 1, inability to flex the hip; 2, inability to flex the knee; and 3, inability to flex the ankle)
Age6 hours before interventionin years
Weight6 hours before interventionin kilograms (kg)
Height6 hours before interventionin meters (m)
Body mass index6 hours before interventionin kg/m square
Headache onsetAfter intrathecal block for five days till appearance of PDPHin hours
Duration of surgical proceduresAfter completion of surgical procedures, within about two hours of interventionin minutes
incidence of respiratory depressionFrom intrathecal block until discharge from PACU, assessed up to 24 hoursRespiratory rate (RR) \< 8 bpm

Countries

Egypt

Outcome results

None listed

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