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Chloroprocaine for Inguinal Herniorrhaphy

Determination of the Minimum Local Anesthetic Dose (MLAD) of Spinal Chloroprocaine for Inguinal Herniorrhaphy in Ambulatory Surgery

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03805503
Enrollment
12
Registered
2019-01-15
Start date
2015-09-16
Completion date
2018-12-04
Last updated
2019-01-15

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

Conditions

Spinal Anesthesia

Keywords

Chloroprocaine, spinal anesthesia, one-day clinic

Brief summary

This study is to determine the minimum effective dose for intrathecal chloroprocaine in inguinal herniorrhaphy in outpatients using a Combined Spinal Epidural (CSE) anesthesia.

Detailed description

A standard CSE procedure will be conducted in which the patient is placed in an upright sitting position on the side of the operation table and a epidural Tuohy needle 18G will be inserted into L3-L4 interspace via a loss-of-resistance technique. The dura will be punctured using a 27-gauge pencil-point spinal needle and a certain dose of chloroprocaine 1% will be given. After the spinal needle is withdrawn, an epidural catheter will be placed and the epidural needle will be withdrawn. After fixation of catheter the patient will be placed in a supine position. The first spinal dose of chloroprocaine 1% to start with is 50mg. This dose has been successfully used for spinal anesthesia in hernia repair outpatients to reach an adequate analgesia. Each time there will be added 2,5 microgram of sufentanil for prolongation of the analgesia. The testing interval is 2 mg.

Interventions

standard CSE procedure in outpatients for inguinal hernia. The first spinal dose of chloroprocaine 1% to start with is 50mg. This dose has been successfully used for spinal anesthesia in hernia repair outpatients to reach an adequate analgesia. 2,5 microgram of sufentanil will be added for prolongation of the analgesia. The testing interval is 2 mg. Efficacy of the analgesia will be evaluated: Successful : sensory block at or above T6 dermatome bilateral at the beginning of surgery without additional analgesia during surgery. Unsuccessful: sensory block under T6 dermatome bilateral and/or VAPS is more than 10 mm at the beginning of surgery what necessitates additional epidurals analgesia. Patients who indicate an ineffective result will receive a rescue treatment by the administration of 5 ml chloroprocaine 3% epidural every 5 minutes with maximum of 30ml. When CSE fails, general anesthesia will be performed.

Sponsors

University Hospital, Ghent
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Intervention model
SEQUENTIAL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Prospective, up-down sequential allocation

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Outpatients for unilateral inguinal hernia repair * ASA I - II - III

Exclusion criteria

* hypersensitivity to amino-ester local anesthetics, para-aminobenzoic acid or sufentanil * contraindications to spinal or epidural anesthesia * bilateral inguinal herniorrhaphy * extremes of height and weight (BMI 20 or 35 kg/m2, height 150 cm or 185 cm)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The dose of chloroprocaine 1% needed for the individual patient for a sensory anesthesia block at or above the T6 dermatomestart of surgeryMLAD of chloroprocaine 1% with 2,5 mcg of sufentanil needed for the individual patient required for a sensory anesthesia at or above the T6 dermatome at the beginning of surgery with no additional epidural anesthesia required during surgery

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time for regression of two segmentsduring surgeryTime for regression of two segments
Ambulation timeFrom starting hour of spinal anesthesia to hour of first ambulation after the end of surgery measured up to 6 hours after surgerymotor recovery
Time to micturitionFrom starting hour of spinal anesthesia to hour of first micturition after the end of surgery measured up to 6 hours after surgeryTime to micturition
Peak block heightduring surgeryhighest sensible block
Time to dischargeFrom starting hour of spinal anesthesia to hour of discharge from hospital measured up to 6 hours after surgeryTime to discharge
Patient satisfaction with anesthesia method: questionnairepostoperatively,at moment of hospital discharge measured up to 6 hours after surgeryPatient satisfaction with simple questionnair (highly satisfied, satisfied, unsatisfied)
Incidence of side effects (perioperative hypotension, respiratory depression, neurologic deficits)perioperativeIncidence of side effects (perioperative hypotension, respiratory depression, neurologic deficits)

Outcome results

None listed

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