Skip to content

Transconjunctival vs Transcutaneous Anaesthesia in Oculoplastics

Comparative Study of Transconjunctival vs. Transcutaneous Routes for Administration of Local Anaesthesia in Oculoplastic Surgery

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04102878
Enrollment
30
Registered
2019-09-25
Start date
2019-06-04
Completion date
2019-11-30
Last updated
2019-09-25

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

Conditions

Anesthesia, Local, Eyelid Diseases

Keywords

oculoplastic surgery

Brief summary

Eyelid surgery is commonly performed under local anaesthesia. For many such procedures, the local anaesthetic injection may be given either transcutaneously (through the skin) or transconjunctivally (through the conjunctiva, i.e. from the inner surface of the eyelid after administration of topical anaesthetic drops). Both methods are commonly used, sometimes in combination. Currently, the choice of route is largely determined by surgeon preference, but it is not known whether one method is better or more comfortable than the other. Our study will compare the two methods of local anaesthetic administration, in terms of patient comfort during anaesthetic administration, efficacy (i.e. whether any additional anaesthetic is needed during surgery), and adverse effects (e.g. bruising, postoperative double vision). We will recruit adult patients who are due to undergo eyelid surgery on both sides under local anaesthesia, on Miss Siah's lists at Southampton General Hospital or Lymington Hospital. Patients will receive topical anaesthetic eye drops to both eyes, followed by an injection of local anaesthetic to each eyelid. One side will be administered transcutaneously, and the other side transconjunctivally. The order be randomised. After the injections, participants will be asked to rate their pain levels during each injection on a standardised numerical scale (1-10). A photograph will also be taken, so that an independent assessor can subsequently rate the extent of any bruising. The eyelid surgery will then be performed as normal, with any need for further anaesthetic during the surgery being recorded. Patients will attend for their normal follow-up appointment afterwards and any postoperative complications will be recorded, but the study will not require any extra hospital visits. The study is sponsored by University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, but does not have any external funding.

Interventions

PROCEDURETransconjunctival anaesthetic

Local anaesthetic (50/50 mixture of bupivacaine 0.5% / lidocaine 2% with adrenaline 1:200 000) administered to the eyelid via the transconjunctival route

Topical anaesthetic drops (proxymetacaine 0.5% and tetracaine 1%) applied

PROCEDURETranscutaneous anaesthetic

Local anaesthetic (50/50 mixture of bupivacaine 0.5% / lidocaine 2% with adrenaline 1:200 000) administered to the eyelid via the transcutaneous route

OTHERPatient comfort questionnaire

The patient will be asked to rate the level of pain during each local anaesthetic injection on a 0-10 scale

The patient will have a photograph taken following the anaesthetic injections to document the presence or absence of bruising

PROCEDUREEyelid surgery

Eyelid surgery will be performed as per the plan from their preoperative appointment

Sponsors

University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* patients undergoing bilateral oculoplastic procedures under local anaesthesia on selected lists at Southampton General Hospital or Lymington New Forest Hospital, UK * able to give informed consent and adhere to the study protocol

Exclusion criteria

* patients undergoing substantially different procedures on each eye * patients undergoing procedures not amenable to the administration of anaesthetic via the transconjunctival route (e.g. brow lift) * patients undergoing a first procedure on one eye and a 'redo' procedure on the fellow eye (as the presence of scar tissue on the previously operated eye is likely to affect results) * patients having their procedure under general anaesthesia, or receiving intravenous sedation prior to the administration of local anaesthetic

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pain during local anaesthetic administrationDuring local anaesthetic administration (2-3 minutes)Patient-rated pain intensity during administration of local anaesthetic via each route (transconjunctival and transcutaneous), expressed on a 0-10 scale (0 being no pain at all and 10 being the worst pain possible)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Requirement for additional anaestheticDuring surgical procedure (up to 1 hour)Requirement (or lack thereof) for additional 'top up' anaesthetic during the eyelid surgery.
Bruising after local anaestheticImmediately after local anaesthetic (2-5 minutes)Amount of bruising visible on facial photographs taken after the anaesthetic is administered but before the eyelid surgery, rated on a numeric scale of 0-3 by an independent assessor (i.e. a member of the research team who did not perform the anaesthetic or surgery).
Other complicationsDuring anaesthetic administration, surgery, or up until the first postoperative visit (2-3 weeks later)Occurrence of any other complications or adverse events potentially attributable to the administration of local anaesthesia

Countries

United Kingdom

Contacts

Primary ContactWe Fong Siah
we.siah@uhs.nhs.uk0044 23 8120 4761

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 15, 2026