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Clinical Trials/NCT06616441
NCT06616441
Completed
Phase 3

The Effect of Intraperitoneal Instillation of Bupivacaine on Postoperative Pain After Surgical Laparoscopy

El Shatby University Hospital for Obstetrics and Gynecology1 site in 1 country80 target enrollmentJune 1, 2023
InterventionsBupivacaine

Overview

Phase
Phase 3
Intervention
Bupivacaine
Conditions
Post Operative Pain
Sponsor
El Shatby University Hospital for Obstetrics and Gynecology
Enrollment
80
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Evaluate the efficacy of instilling bupivacaine intraperitoneal in reducing postoperative pain after surgical laparoscopy for gynecologic procedures.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
last year

Overview

Brief Summary

Pain after surgical laparoscopy is due to various causes, such as : trocar insertion stimulating somatic pain receptors in the skin ,chemical irritation of peritoneal nerves due to abdominal distension by CO2 which is transformed into carbonic acid in nerves, distention secondary to pneumoperitoneum causes mechanical irritation of visceral and parietal nerves of the peritoneum, furthermore the surgical intervention causing injury and inflammation of the tissues, spillage of blood or serous fluid causing more irritation to the visceral and parietal nerves of the peritoneum which leads to visceral dull aching pain referred mainly to the distribution of the nerve dermatomal area.

Unfortunately, pain is the major complaint of the patients, thus making its evaluation a fundamental requisite in the outcome assessment in our practice. Pain intensity, duration and related disability are the aspects that define pain and its effects. For each of these aspects, different assessment tools exist.

Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) consists of a straight line with the endpoints defining extreme limits such as 'no pain at all' and 'pain as bad as it could be' The patient is asked to mark his pain level on the line between the two endpoints.

There are numerous interventions that are associated with reduction in the incidence, severity or both of pain or a reduction in analgesia requirements for women having surgical laparoscopy for gynecological purposes.

Bupivacaine, is a local anesthetic. In nerve blocks, it is injected around the nerve that supplies a certain area, or into the spinal canal's epidural space, bupivacaine binds to the intracellular portion of voltage-gated sodium channels and blocks sodium influx into nerve cells, which prevents depolarization. Without depolarization, no initiation or conduction of a pain signal can occur.

Hence the idea of our study is to instill bupivacaine in a certain concentration in the peritoneal cavity in an attempt to reduce postoperative pain after surgical laparoscopy for gynecological purposes that will inflect certainly on patient's hospital stay and mobility.

Detailed Description

This randomized controlled trial will be conducted for (80) women undergoing laparoscopic procedures at endoscopy unit at El-Shatby Maternity University Hospital, after approval of ethical committee of Alexandria Faculty of Medicine. Randomization will be through opaque sealed envelopes. After signing their informed consents, the patients who are included in the study will be divided into two groups each group include (60) patients. Group A: Patients that will receive intraoperative instillation of bupivacaine. Group B: (Control group) that will not receive the medication. The patients in both groups will be subjected to: Pre-operative: History taking (gynecological, obstetric, medical any drug reaction and surgical), general examination and abdominal examination. Intra-operative: premedication : 1.5 microgram/kg fentanyl IV induction of anathesia: 2mg/kg Propofol IV , 0.5 mg/kg Atracurium IV , ventilation via face mask 2-3 minutes , then endotracheal intubation 1gm paracetamol IV as intraoperative analgesia which will not interfere with postoperative pain scoring. Group (A) only will receive intra-peritoneal 40 ml bupivacaine 0.2%, after laparoscopic procedure before removing trocars.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 1, 2023
End Date
September 15, 2024
Last Updated
last year
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Female

Investigators

Sponsor
El Shatby University Hospital for Obstetrics and Gynecology
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Aly Hussein

primary investigator

El Shatby University Hospital for Obstetrics and Gynecology

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients those are indicated for surgical laparoscopy, whatever the gynecological problem.
  • Age between (18-50) years.
  • Cooperative patient that can express pain and score it.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Non-cooperative patients that cannot express and score pain.
  • Drug abusers due to altered pain threshold.
  • Surgical laparoscopy indicated for oncological procedures.
  • Any allergy or reaction to any of the derivatives of bupivacaine drug group.
  • Any cardio-pulmonary condition.

Arms & Interventions

Grouo A

Patients that will receive intraoperative instillation of bupivacaine.

Intervention: Bupivacaine

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Evaluate the efficacy of instilling bupivacaine intraperitoneal in reducing postoperative pain after surgical laparoscopy for gynecologic procedures.

Time Frame: up to 1 day

Evaluate the efficacy of instilling bupivacaine intraperitoneal in reducing postoperative pain after surgical laparoscopy for gynecologic procedures.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Assessment of the timing passed postoperative, since the patient needs to start the first analgesic dose.(up to 1 day)
  • Frequency of analgesia requested by the patient in postoperative period.(up to 1 day)
  • Assessment of the time passed postoperative since the patient start mobility(up to 1 day)

Study Sites (1)

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