The most useful method to manage pain after major ankle surgery is infusion of local analgesics with a catheter close to the sciatic nerve. Sensation from the ankle are carried by three nerves: The tibial and peroneal nerve (unified in the sciatic nerve) and the saphenous nerve. Study purpose is to test whether continuous infusion of local analgesics by saphenous nerve catheter provide a better treatment of pain in comparison with a single injection nerve block. In addition cost-effectiveness of the two methods are compared. The 50 patients of the trial are randomized in clusters of ten. We intend to do a preliminary analysis of the data from the first 40 patients. However, it is not an interim analysis. Fifty patients will be included independent of the result of the preliminary analysis. The random allocation of the last 10 patients will also be double-blinded.
Major ankle surgery are known to be very painful the first 48 hours after the operation due to surgical oedema. This pain is difficult to control with systemic analgesics. Pain relief with systemic analgesics requires high doses of intravenous opioids and is associated with breakthrough pain and adverse effects of opioids (sedation, nausea, vomiting, obstipation, urinary retention, respiratory depression). Continuous, peripheral nerve block with catheter technique for two days minimizes the need for systemic analgesics. Today such a continuous sciatic nerve block is part of the standard pain treatment after major ankle surgery on Aarhus University Hospital. Despite accurate placement of the catheter many patients are in great pain because the saphenous nerve remain unaffected. A single injection block relieve the pain but a block with Ropivacaine only last 8-15 hours. Severe postoperative pain leads to high opioid dosages, cognitive blurring, nausea, vomiting, reduced ambulation, increased surgical stress response and increased morbidity. Pain problems and adverse effects prolongs postoperative observation time and maybe also time to discharge. The aim of the study establish whether continuous saphenous nerve block is efficient (pain relief or reduced opioid consumption) and justified (cost-effectiveness analysis) compared with single injection block.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
50
0,2% Ropivacaine by elastomeric infusion pump at 5 ml/h for 48 postoperative hours
Isoton saline by elastomeric infusion pump at 5 ml/h for 48 postoperative hours
Aarhus University Hospital
Aarhus, Denmark
Accumulated opioid consumption
Time frame: First 48 hours postoperative
Success rate for saphenous nerve analgesia
Pain rated by NRS and opioid consumption
Time frame: Postoperative, first 48 hours
Success rate for clinical analgesia of foot and ankle
Pain rated by NRS and opioid consumption
Time frame: Postoperative, first 48 hours
Success rate for tibial and peroneal nerve block
Pain rated by NRS and test of sensation on the toes
Time frame: Postoperative, first 48 hours
Localisation of worst pain
Time frame: Postoperative, first 48 hours
Cost-effectiveness
Time frame: 2 first postoperative days
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