Research study to determine if pain relief following foot and/or ankle surgery is influenced by the technique used to place perineural catheter. The catheters are placed using ultrasound-guidance or nerve stimulation and the method is selected at random using a computer program. This may help to determine if one of these methods is associated with an increased success rate and incidence of foot numbness during the infusion.
Specific Aim 1: To determine the relationship between perineural catheter placement technique (ultrasound-guidance and electrical stimulation) and quality of postoperative analgesia during continuous popliteal-sciatic nerve blocks following moderate-to-severely painful orthopedic surgery. Hypothesis 1: When inserting a perineural catheter for a continuous peripheral nerve block, the use of electrical stimulation, as compared with ultrasound-guidance, is associated with decreased pain the morning following moderate-to-severely painful orthopedic surgery as measured with a numeric rating scale. Specific Aim 2: To determine the relationship between perineural catheter placement technique (ultrasound-guidance and electrical stimulation) and degree of sensory deficit during continuous popliteal-sciatic nerve blocks following moderate-to-severely painful orthopedic surgery. Hypothesis 2: When inserting a perineural catheter for a continuous peripheral nerve block, the use of electrical stimulation, as compared with ultrasound-guidance, is associated with increased sensory deficit the day following moderate-to-severely painful orthopedic surgery as measured with a simple 0-10 scale (0=no numbness; 10=completely insensate) of the part of the foot with the greatest sensory deficit at the time of the data-collection phone call.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
80
Patients will be randomized to one of two groups: Popliteal-sciatic catheter placed via ultrasound-guidance or placed via electrical stimulation. All patients will be given 40ml of 1.5% mepivicaine prior to surgery and then given a pain pump after surgery containing 0.2% ropivacaine. The patients pain scores will be assessed just prior to surgery and the day following surgery. The time of catheter placement and numbness the patient is experiencing in their foot and toes is also assessed and recorded by research staff.
UCSD Medical Center
San Diego, California, United States
The primary outcome measurement will be the average pain in the three hours previous to a phone call the day following surgery as measured on a numeric rating scale (NRS, 0-10, 0=no pain, 10=worst imaginable pain).
Time frame: 3 hours on day following surgery
Sensory deficit in the operative limb the day following surgery as measured with a simple 0-10 scale (0=no numbness; 10=completely insensate) of the part of the foot with the greatest sensory deficit at time of the data collection phone call.
Time frame: 1 day
Time for catheter placement. Time will begin when probe is placed on skin for the ultrasound-guidance method and when the nerve stimulation needle is placed on the skin for the electrical stimulation method.
Time frame: 30 minutes
Catheter placement success rate as assessed by attending physician who will test for sensory deficit.
Time frame: 30 minutes
Worst pain experienced since the surgery in the surgical limb as measured on the 0-10 NRS as assessed by the research staff when they call the patient the day following surgery.
Time frame: 1 day
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