Patients often experience moderate to severe postoperative pain, especially during the first hours after hepatectomy. Systemic opioids given with patient-controlled analgesia has be used after hepatectomy in many medical center(Aubrun, Monsel et al. 2001; Aubrun, Salvi et al. 2005), but the analgesic effect can be limited and undesirable side effects may occur. A case report described that right thoracic paravertebral block reduced pain and analgesic requirements after right lobe hepatectomy(Ho, Karmakar et al. 2004). Compared with epidural analgesia, thoracic paravertebral block probably carries a much lower risk of spinal haematoma in the presence of moderate haemostatic deficiencies (Richardson and Lonnqvist 1998; Karmakar 2001). We therefore designed a prospective, randomized, subject and assessor blinded, parallel-group, placebo controlled study to test the hypothesis that continuous right thoracic paravertebral analgesia decreases opioid consumption during the first 24 h after right lobe hepatectomy in patients receiving i.v. patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with sufentanil.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
48
Before anesthesia, continuous right thoracic paravertebral block of T7 is performed. After injection of 5 mL normal saline, a catheter (PAJUNK, Geisingen, Germany) is advanced medially the estimated distance to the paravertebral space. After injection of 1% lidocaine 15ml, the block level is tested by pinprick and recorded 15 minutes later. At the end of operation, syringe contained 0.2% ropivacaine is connected to paravertebral catheter, a 10ml bolus of 0.2% ropivacaine is injected via the paravertebral catheter, followed by an infusion of ropivacaine 0.2% at 6 ml/h for postoperative pain management.
Once arrival at the PACU, all patients were placed on a postoperative analgesic regimen that included patient-controlled analgesia with intravenous sufentanil (bolus 1μg, lockout time 10 min) and tramadol 100 mg IV for severe pain (NRS 6-10).
Before anesthesia, continuous right thoracic paravertebral block of T7 is performed. After injection of 5 mL normal saline, a catheter (PAJUNK, Geisingen, Germany) is advanced medially the estimated distance to the paravertebral space. After injection of 1% lidocaine 15ml, the block level is tested by pinprick and recorded 15 minutes later. At the end of operation, syringe contained 0.9% saline is connected to paravertebral catheter, a 10ml bolus of 0.9% saline is injected via the paravertebral catheter, followed by an infusion of 0.9% saline at 6 ml/h for postoperative pain management.
Department of Anaesthesiology, Tongji Hospital of Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology
Wuhan, Hubei, China
The cumulative opioid consumption
Time frame: At 24 postoperative hours
The pain scores determined by the numeric rating scale (NRS, 0-10)
Time frame: At 1, 4, 8, 16, and 24 hrs after the surgery
Incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting
Time frame: Up to 24 postoperative hrs
Incidence of postoperative respiratory depression
Time frame: Up to 24 postoperative hrs
Intraoperative bleeding
Time frame: Up to 4 hours
Postoperative hospital length of stay
Time frame: Up to 6 weeks
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