The goal of the proposed study is to investigate the relationship between two standard treatments, lidocaine or a mixture of lidocaine and bupivacaine, and 1) postoperative pain, and; 2) narcotic use following pacemaker or defibrillator insertion in subjects who undergo arrhythmia surgery at Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute while adjusting for pertinent clinical and/or demographic factors. No control group is necessary.
Patients receiving a pacemaker or defibrillator are currently given Bupivacaine, Lidocaine, or a mixture of the two for local anesthetic treatment (in addition to general anesthesia). The choice of local anesthetic to be used during surgery is based primarily on the differences in time for the anesthetic to take effect and duration thereafter. Lidocaine typically works in less than 1 minute and lasts approximately 45 minutes. Bupivacaine works within 2 to 3 minutes and lasts 4 to 6 hours. Lidocaine is often preferable due to its shorter time of effectiveness. However, its relatively short duration may translate into a higher use of narcotics for pain management during postoperative care - particularly within the first hour following emergence from general anesthesia. Therefore it is conceivable that these patients would have higher levels of pain, higher cost of care related to cost of narcotics, and higher cost of caregiver time required to administer them.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
300
5cc 1% Lidocaine solution mixed with 5 cc 0.25% Bupivacaine solution administered locally to the surgical site at time of the surgical procedure. Administered once only.
10 cc 1% solution administered locally to the surgical site at time of surgical procedure. Administered once only.
Baylor Jack and Jane Heart and Vascular Institute
Dallas, Texas, United States
Pain Scores on the Visual Analog Scale
To assess the association between standard local anesthetic choice (Lidocaine or a combination of Marcaine and Lidocaine) and postoperative pain in patients receiving a pacemaker or defibrillator. Pain will be measured using the visual analog scale (a standardized and validated scale) at 3 time points: prior to surgery, once awakened from surgery, and 4 hours after.
Time frame: 3 Years
Total Post-Operative Narcotic Use
To assess the association between local anesthetic choice (Lidocaine or a combination of Marcaine and Lidocaine) and narcotic use (including dosages and strength of narcotic) within 4 hours after the patient emerges from general anesthesia. The type, number, and dose of narcotics will be collected up to 4 hours after patient awakens from surgery. Narcotics administered will be standardized to the equivalent dose of morphine.
Time frame: 3 Years
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