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Efficacy of External Nasal Nerve Block in Prevention of Postoperative Agitation Following Nasal Surgeries

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Agitation States as Acute Reaction to Gross Stress
Interventions
Procedure: External nasal nerve block
Registration Number
NCT03069027
Lead Sponsor
Al Jedaani Hospital
Brief Summary

Emergence agitation following general anaesthesia may lead to serious complications like self-extubation or removal of catheters, which can lead to hypoxia, aspiration pneumonia, bleeding or reoperation. Nose surgery is associated with a higher incidence of emergence agitation. The investigators planned to evaluate the efficacy of external nasal nerve block in prevention of postoperative agitation following external nasal surgeries under general anesthesia(GA).

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  • 110 adult patients of ASA physical status I and II,
  • Age 20-60 years,
  • Scheduled for elective external nasal surgeries in which nasal packing on each side was used postoperatively for 24 hours.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. History of uncontrolled hypertension,
  2. Ischemic or valvular heart disease,
  3. Use of MAO inhibitors or adrenergic blocking drugs,
  4. Cognitive impairment,
  5. Patients taking antipsychotics,
  6. Renal insufficiency or liver dysfunction

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Group II(block)Xylocaine, adrenaline'External nasal nerve block by Xylocaine, adrenaline'
Group I(control)saline adrenalinepatients allocated for external nasal nerve block with saline adrenaline 1/200,000 (placebo)
Group II(block)External nasal nerve block'External nasal nerve block by Xylocaine, adrenaline'
Group I(control)External nasal nerve blockpatients allocated for external nasal nerve block with saline adrenaline 1/200,000 (placebo)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
postoperative agitationEmergence is defined as the time interval from discontinuation of anesthesia to 5 min after extubation.

Assessment done using Richmond agitation- sedation scale (RASS)

Quality of recovery24 hours postoperative

Quality of recovery

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Extubation timeUp to 15 after discontinuation of anesthesia
Surgical timeduration of surgery in minutes up to 3 hours

intraoperative

first verbal response timeup to 15 minutes

period from discontinuation of anesthesia 'time zero' to 1st verbal response in minutes

dose of fentanylintraoperative period in minutes

Fentanyl boluses were given in response to changes in hemodynamics (more than 15% increases in MAP and HR than the baseline values taken after induction by 5 minutes)

complication of nasal blockFrom injection to 24 hours postoperative

including local anesthetic systemic toxicity, vascular injury, intravascular injection of local anesthetic, and local hematoma.

morphine dose in PACUone hour in PACU

equivalent morphine dose in PACU (calculated using opioid:morphine equivalents of 100 µg i.v. fentanyl to 10 mg i.v. morphine; 75- 100 mg IV pethidine to 10 mg i.v. morphine

Nausea and vomiting in PACUone hour in PACU

Four-point nausea and vomiting scale (0=no nausea; 1=mild nausea; 2=severe nausea requiring antiemetics; and 3=retching, vomiting, or both) was also evaluated

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Al Jedaani group of hospitals

🇸🇦

Jeddah, Meccah, Saudi Arabia

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