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Comparison of Analgesic Efficacy ESP Block and QLB II in Kidney Transplantation

Phase 4
Completed
Conditions
Postoperative Analgesia
Intraoperative Analgesia
Registration Number
NCT06660953
Lead Sponsor
University of Gaziantep
Brief Summary

Renal transplantation is an increasingly common surgery in recent years. Opioid and/or NSAID use is common in postoperative pain management. However, these drugs have many side effects. Peripheral blocks provide more effective analgesia both intra and postoperatively, and also reduce the use of systemic drugs. The aim of this study was to compare the effects of two different nerve blocks (ESP vs QLB II) on intraoperative remifentanil dose and postoperative analgesia.

Detailed Description

All patients participating in this study underwent a standard anesthesia induction and maintenance. When the patients arrived in the operating room, noninvasive blood pressure, heart rate, electrocardiogram, and oxygen saturation monitoring were performed. Intravenous administration of 2-3 mg/kg propofol, 1-2 mcg/kg Fentanyl, and 0.1 mg/kg atracurium was performed for general anesthesia induction, and then the patients were intubated. After tracheal intubation, anesthesia was maintained with 50% oxygen/air and sevoflurane. An additional 0.1 mg/kg atracurium was added during the surgery as needed. Analgesia was provided with 0.1-0.3 mcg/kg/h intravenous infusion of remifentanil, which was increased or decreased according to the patient's hemodynamics. Intravenous neostigmine was administered for neuromuscular recovery after the surgery. The patient awoke from general anesthesia. Total anesthesia duration, hemodynamic data, and remifentanil dose were recorded.

Patients who would receive a block after general anesthesia induction were randomly determined. These patients were placed in the lateral decubitus position and ESP block or QLB II was applied under ultrasound guidance and echogenic needle (Techniplex 18 gauge; 100 mm needle, Vygon value life) under aseptic conditions. All interventions were performed by an experienced anesthesiology specialist. All procedures were performed under ultrasound guidance using a linear probe (Logiq e GE 12L-RS linear probe, GE LOGIQ e Ultrason device). Patients were randomly divided into 3 groups. Patients who underwent ESB were named Group E, those who underwent QLB were named Group Q, and patients who did not receive a block were named the control group.

The QL block II was done under aseptic technique, in lateral position with the side intended to block side up. A high frequency ultrasound linear probe covered in sterile sheath was placed anterior and superior to the iliac crest. The three anterior abdominal muscles were visualized. The external oblique muscle was followed posterolaterally until its posterior border was identified. Subsequently, the probe was tilted towards the attachment site of both the internal and external oblique muscles over the quadratus (QL) muscle until the midline of the thoracolumbar fascia was seen as a bright hyperechogenic line located between the posterior border of the quadratus lumborum muscle and the middle thoraco-lumbar fascia (anterior to latissiumus dorsi and erector spinae muscles). A 22-gauge Facet-tip SonoPlex needle of appropriate length estimated from the depth and length of required needle trajectory during scout scanning was inserted via in-plane technique. The needle was directed from anterolateral to posteromedial after making a negative aspiration test with aliquots of 0.5 ml saline to confirm hydrodissection in the lumbar interfascial triangle (LIFT) between the QL muscle and middle thoracolumbar fascia. An injection of LA was given according to the group allocated. Aliquots of LA with intermittent aspiration during injection was performed in the desired confirmed space After the needle tip was correctly positioned, 10 ml of bupivacaine and 10 ml of 0.9% saline solution were injected.

For ESP, high frequency linear ultrasound probe was planned transversely to the midline and spinous features were visualized. Cervical C7 and T7 vertebrae at the lower end of the scapula, which were accepted as landmarks, were determined and marked with a sterile surgical drawing pen. According to these landmarks, the USG probe was moved 2-3 cm laterally towards the points where kidney transplantation was planned at the T10 vertebral level, and the transverse parts, trapezius, latissimus dorsi, serratus and erector spina muscles were visualized. Using the block needle that can be visualized on USG with in-plane surgery, the skin, subcutaneous tissue and trapezius, latissimus dorsi, serratus and erector spina muscles were passed in a cranio caudal direction and the needle location was confirmed by hydrodissection with 2-5 ml of serum. The distribution of the block procedure and the spread of local anesthetic were linearly visualized with 10 ml bupivacaine and 10 ml 0.9% saline.

The control group received 0.1 mg/kg morphine subcutaneously 30 minutes before the end of the operation. All patients were connected to a patient-controlled analgesia device (1 mg Fentanyl/100 ml saline, 2 ml bolus dose, 15 min lock, infusion rate 2 ml/h).

Postoperatively, total 24-hour fentanyl consumption and pain scores of all patients were recorded according to the visual analog scale at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12 and 24 hours.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
66
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria

Patients with a history of allergy to general and local anesthetics to be used, inability to understand or participate in pain scoring, inability to use the PCA pump, or conditions that prevent the performance of trunkal blocks (anatomical or postoperative deformations in the region)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Effectiveness of postoperative analgesiapostoperative 24 hours

visuel analog score \< 3

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
consumption of add analgesic dospostoperative 24 hours

Reduction in consumption of additional analgesic administered (fentanyl PCA)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Gaziantep

🇹🇷

Gaziantep, Turkey

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