Forefoot surgeries involve a relatively short operation usually completed in 1 - 1½ hours, with patients generally being allowed to go home on the same day. Despite this, post-surgery pain is often severe and a delay in the discharge of patients due to difficulty with pain control after the surgery is common. Performing nerve blocks in association with sedation is the preferred way to provide pain relief and offers important benefits for foot surgeries. With nerve blocks, the requirement for oral painkillers and their associated side effects is reduced. Increasing the duration of local anesthetic action is helpful as it increases the time of pain relief, allowing for a smoother transition to oral pain medications, earlier discharge, and faster recovery. Recently, Precedex has been considered for its usefulness in prolonging the pain relief produced by nerve blocks. The identified benefits of this particular use include reducing post-surgical pain medications requirements, reducing the incidence of nausea and vomiting, reducing the incidence of sedation from such medication, and diminishing the incidence of respiratory depression (inadequate breathing). Two small studies have also shown that adding dexmedetomidine to nerve block solution results in prolonging pain relief. The purpose of the study is to examine several doses of dexmedetomidine combined with local anesthetic drugs and determine the best combination for prolonging pain relief, while minimizing potential side effects.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
12
An anesthetic concoction of 2% Lidocaine, 1% Ropivacaine, and Dexmedetomidine diluted solution will be provided via a series of anesthetic injections related to the ankle block procedure
Toronto Western Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Duration of Analgesia
Patients will be asked about the duration of their analgesia by asking when they first felt pain at the surgical site. Patients will be asked prior to discharge, and routinely during specified phone calls until analgesia wear off
Time frame: patients will be followed for two weeks
Requirements for pain medications; complications
Patients will be called at 24 hours, 7 days and 14 days and asked to describe their pain levels, the requirements for pain medication, and any complications that may have arisen post-operatively.
Time frame: weekly for up to 2 weeks
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