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Selective Spinal Anaesthesia With Hyperbaric Prilocain With 2%Provides Better Perioperative Hemodynamic Stability for Patients With Peripheral Vascular Disease and Cardiac Dysfunction in Lower Limb Surgery

Selective Spinal Anesthesia Using Hyperbaric Prilocaine 2% Provides Better Perioperative Hemodynamic Stability for Patients With Peripheral Vascular Disease and Cardiac Dysfunction Undergoing Lower Limb Vascular Surgery

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05877690
Enrollment
80
Registered
2023-05-26
Start date
2023-10-31
Completion date
2024-12-31
Last updated
2023-05-26

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

Conditions

Hemodynamic Stability

Brief summary

to compare the safety and efficacy of spinal anesthesia using Hyperbaric Prilocaine 2% versus Hyperbaric Bupivacaine 0.5% for patients with peripheral vascular disease and cardiac dysfunction.

Detailed description

Spinal anesthesia has become increasingly popular for inpatient surgery, but, until recently, its use has been limited in ambulatory surgery due to the lack of a safe and licensed short-acting local anesthetic agent. An ideal intrathecal agent for ambulatory surgery should have a rapid onset of motor and sensory blockade, predictable regression within an acceptable time frame, and a low incidence of adverse effects. Hyperbaric Bupivacaine is a long-acting local anesthetic from the amide group and has a low incidence of transient neurological symptoms (TNS). Because of its pharmacological profile, the recovery of motor and sensory blocks is delayed compared to short-acting local anesthetics. The incidence of postoperative urinary retention with long-acting local anesthetics like bupivacaine is higher than with short-acting local anesthetics . Successful spinal anesthesia with low doses of bupivacaine between 5 and 10 mg without additives has been described for outpatients. The incidence of urinary retention was still 3.7-16%. Furthermore, with these low doses, block height becomes unpredictable, and the risk of block failure is high . Prilocaine is an amide local anesthetic with an intermediate duration of action after spinal administration. Recently, the old local anesthetics prilocaine was reintroduced in the market. It is available in the hyperbaric form and provides anesthesia for 75-90 min after spinal administration . Hyperbaric prilocaine 2% is increasingly used for spinal anesthesia in the ambulatory setting , as it has the advantage of faster recovery times than hyperbaric bupivacaine . We aimed to compare spinal anesthesia using hyperbaric prilocaine 2% and hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.5% for day case surgery in terms of sensory block, and motor block resolution times. The time for first spontaneous voiding and duration of stay in the PACU and time to home readiness. Vascular disease and cardiac dysfunction are linked in many ways. They share common risk factors and comorbidities, and patients with systemic vascular disease often have concomitant heart disease, because the blood vessels of the heart are not spared. In patients presenting for surgery, the presence of vascular disease puts the patient at increased risk for perioperative cardiac complications, and vascular surgery poses the highest surgical risk for perioperative cardiac events. In addition, the diseased vessels supplying critical organs depend on the perfusion pressure supplied by the heart, so any cardiac dysfunction thus amplifies the effect of poor perfusion. Patients presenting with both vascular disease and cardiac dysfunction pose a particular challenge to the anesthesiologist; although treatment goals are similar small physiologic disturbances can quickly lead to large, serious changes in clinical status. Selective spinal anesthesia performed with a short-term hyperbaric local anesthetic could be a perfect solution, because it guarantees rapid sensory and motor block, predictable duration, and low incidence of side effects. It is usually well accepted by both patients and surgeons due to its high reliability, as it provides effective analgesia, with minimal side effects, rapid changeover times, and low costs .

Interventions

Patient will be received the drug intrathecal

DRUGPrilocaine Hydrochloride 2% Injection

Patient will be received the drug intrathecal

Sponsors

Assiut University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE (Caregiver)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Adult patients of aged \>18 years old. Both sexes, males and females. * The time of surgery does not exceed 75 min. * Compensated cardiac dysfunction * ASA physical status: II- IV

Exclusion criteria

* refusal * Allergy to the studied drugs. * Patients with contraindications to spinal anesthesia. * Patients with advanced decompensated cardiac, renal, hepatic disease * Coagulopathy or thrombocytopenia

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Monitoring blood pressure both systole and diastole75 minutesWhen, how the chang in the baseline

Countries

Egypt

Contacts

Primary ContactZahwa Yehya, Master
drzahwa1996@gmail.com+0201007968687
Backup ContactSaeid Metwally
+0201030072161

Outcome results

None listed

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