MedPath

To compare between two techniques of providing pain relief - caudal and TFP block - in children undergoing inguinal hernia surgery

Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Medical and Surgical,
Registration Number
CTRI/2025/06/088702
Lead Sponsor
Dr Arun Parthasarathy
Brief Summary

Surgical repair of inguinal hernia is one of the most common day care surgeries in the pediatric population. Providing good analgesia is important for early mobilization and discharge from the hospital. Achieving adequate postoperative analgesia in the pediatric age group is also important in terms of future pain perception and chronic pain development in the subsequent period. Regional anaesthesia in children has become increasingly popular over the past few decades. A variety of peripheral and central nerve blocks have been developed to ensure that perioperative pain can be effectively controlled. Caudal anesthesia can be useful in the pediatric population for sub-umbilical procedures, including inguinal hernia repair, urological interventions, anal atresia repair, and lower extremity procedures. It can be stand-alone or be a supplement to general anesthesia for these procedures. Caudal analgesia in lower abdominal surgeries has become unpopular among physicians because of its short duration of analgesia (4–6) h, and its potential adverse effects including motor block, urine retention and the accidental dural puncture. Currently, fascial blocks are widely used for postoperative analgesia in patients scheduled for lower abdominal surgeries.Transversalis fascia plane block (TFB) was described by Hebbard et al. in 2009 which targets the T12 and L1 spinal nerves. In TFB the local anesthetic is deposited at the level of posterior axillary line in the layer between the transversus abdominis muscle and its deep investing transversalis fascia.The analgesic efficacy of TFP block has been demonstrated in adult surgery, including iliac crest bone graft harvesting, inguinal herniorrhaphy and cesarean section. Very few studies in literature have demonstrated the efficacy of this block in paediatric population. To our knowledge, no previous studies have compared the efficacy of this block with caudal epidural block.We have planned this study to counteract the above challenges faced during caudal and hypothesize that the analgesia coverage, intraoperative response, pain scores postoperatively in the first 12 hours in TFB will be comparable to caudal block and can be easily practiced with appropriate availability of USG and equipment.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
64
Inclusion Criteria

ASA physical status I and II undergoing unilateral inguinal hernia surgery.

Exclusion Criteria

Participant refusal Absolute contraindications for the block Additional procedures at different sites.

Study & Design

Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Time to first analgesic requirement after surgery (in minutes)1,3,6 and 12 hours postoperatively
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
FLACC scorestotal dose of

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Kasturba Medical College and Kasturba hospital

🇮🇳

Udupi, KARNATAKA, India

Kasturba Medical College and Kasturba hospital
🇮🇳Udupi, KARNATAKA, India
Dr Arun Parthasarathy
Principal investigator
9600129686
p.arun1991@gmail.com

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