Ultrasound Guided Erector Spinae Muscle Block on Postoperative Pain in Pediatric Patient Undergoing Hip Reconstruction Surgeries
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Pediatric Hip Surgery
- Sponsor
- Assiut University
- Enrollment
- 70
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability (FLACC) Pain Scale 2 hours postoperative
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 5 months ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Surgical repair of the hip can be extremely painful and is associated with considerable postoperative pain in children despite the use of systemic opioids. These patients may benefit from neuraxial analgesia in adjunction with general anesthesia.
Detailed Description
Regional anesthetic techniques have been widely used for pain management in a variety of pediatric surgeries, as they increase the efficiency of postoperative pain control; minimize parenteral opioid requirements, and improve both patient and parent satisfaction as well. The erector spinae muscle plane block (ESB) is an evolving regional anesthetic technique gaining popularity in pediatric procedures. Erector spinae block is an effective regional anesthesia method as it blocks both somatic and visceral pain by injecting the local anesthetic solution into the inter-fascial space between the transverse process and the erector spinae muscle, it is performed by distributing local anesthetic into several paravertebral spaces. it was reported a successful ultrasound-guided ESP block performed at the L4 transverse process level provided postoperative analgesia in adult patients undergoing hip and proximal femur surgeries. Caudal block (CB) is a well-established remarkable practice because of its simplicity, safety, and effectiveness. A single-shot caudal block with a local anesthetic agent, such as bupivacaine, is a standard procedure, and analgesia is provided during pediatric orthopedic surgeries in the lower limbs; unfortunately, its action stops early in the postoperative period.
Investigators
Shimaa Abbas Hassan
lecturer
Assiut University
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •• ASA I and II,
- •aged 2-7 years
- •scheduled for unilateral surgical hip reconstruction under general anaesthesia.
Exclusion Criteria
- •Children with spinal anomalies,
- •altered mental status or a history of developmental delay,
- •infection at the site of injection,
- •history of allergy to local anaesthetics
- •history of blood disease or coagulopathy,
- •Patient's guardian refusal to participate in the study
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability (FLACC) Pain Scale 2 hours postoperative
Time Frame: first postoperative 24 hours
To evaluate the quality of postoperative analgesia using the FLACC. Each category is scored on the 0-2 scale, which results in a total score of 0-10. 0=relaxed and comfortable, 1-3= mild discomfort, 4-6= moderate pain and 7-10= sever discomfort or pain or both
Secondary Outcomes
- Emergence agitation using Paediatric Anaesthesia Emergence Delirium (PAED) scale.(24 hours)
- total analgesic requests(24 hours)
- time to the first analgesic request(recorded in hours for the first 24 hour)