Major abdominal surgery is associated with postoperative pain. Transversus Abdominis Plane(TAP) block has been shown to reduce pain and opioid-requirements after abdominal surgery. However a single block has a short effect of up to 12 hours depending on the type local-anesthetics used. With this study we wish to investigate the possibilities to place a TAP-catheter in order to prolong the the effect of the TAP-block by giving repeatedly bolus-injections in the TAP catheter and to study the pain and the opioid requirements of patients undergoing elective colon-resection when given a TAP-catheter preoperatively. Our hypothesis is that it is practical and technical possible to place bilateral TAP-catheters pre-operatively and that pain and opioid-requirements will be low.
Postoperative pain is a major challenge in the work of anesthesia. Epidural catheter is the golden standard for postoperative pain management after major abdominal surgery. However a number of patient have absolute or relative contraindication to the placement of an epidural catheter. It is therefore necessary to find a good alternative to epidural catheter. Transversus abdominis plane(TAP) block has been shown to provide analgesia of the abdominal wall and reduce opioid-requirements and pain after abdominal surgery. However the effect of a TAP block is limited to the time of efficacy of the local analgesic used. Placing a TAP-catheter in order to prolong the effect of the TAP-block by repeatedly bolus-injections in the TAP-catheters has only been sporadically described and so far never investigated in a systematic way. We will investigate the practical and technical possibility to place bilateral ultrasound-guided TAP-catheters pre-operatively on patients undergoing elective colon-resection. Further more we will evaluate the pain and opioid-requirement postoperatively.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
15
Place bilateral TAP-catheters preoperatively and give repeated boluses of local analgetics in order to treat postoperative pain after colon-surgery.
Intermittent boluses of Bupivacain 2.5 mg/ml with epinephrine, 20 ml in each catheter every 12 hours for the first 2 postoperative days.
departement of anesthesiology, Aalborg University Hospital
Aalborg, North Denmark, Denmark
Postoperative Pain Using Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10
NRS is a pain score and the score can vary between 0 and 10 by which 0 means no pain and 10 equals the worst possible pain. NRS was evaluated at the time 0, 1, 2, 4, 8 , 12, 18 , 24 and 36 hours after arriving in the post anesthesia care unit at rest and during coughing.
Time frame: 0-36 hours postoperative
Opioid Requirements Postoperative
Supplementary opioid requirements for the first 48 hours from arriving in the post anesthesia care unit. Results are total opioid-requirements for the first 48 hours. Way of administration was intravenous in all but 6 administrations. If given orally, a 1:3 ratio was used for conversion from oral to intravenous morphine.
Time frame: 48 hours from arriving in the post anesthesia care unit.
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