Many patients undergoing ambulatory shoulder arthroscopy experience moderate to severe pain after surgery. Finding ways to minimize postoperative pain are ideal. Dexamethasone is a corticosteroid that is commonly used to prevent and/or treat nausea and inflammation. The addition of higher doses of dexamethasone to nerve blocks, which are injections of local anesthetics into the upper shoulder area, has been shown to prolong block duration and reduce pain. However, it is unclear whether the advantage of longer pain relief outweighs patient dissatisfaction with the prolonged feeling of a numb arm. Furthermore, recent studies have shown that systemic, intravenously administered dexamethasone may similarly reduce pain levels when compared with dexamethasone in the block. In our study, the investigators propose to examine the effect of low-dose IV versus block dexamethasone on interscalene block duration in patients undergoing shoulder arthroscopy. Most studies have used 4 mg or more. One study suggests that 1 mg may have the same effect as larger doses. Our aims are to determine whether the addition of low-dose dexamethasone to a local anesthetic in the block can prolong its duration, and whether there are differences in postoperative pain, consumption of painkillers, side effects, and satisfaction in patients who received IV or block dexamethasone. Patients (128 total) will be randomly assigned to either receive IV or block dexamethasone, and postoperative assessments (pain, painkiller use, side effects, block duration, satisfaction, complications) will be made via phone at 2, 3, 4 (if needed), and 7-10 days after surgery. Results from this study will reveal whether patients prefer the longer-duration analgesia that may be obtained with low-dose dexamethasone in the block.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
128
Hospital for Special Surgery
New York, New York, United States
Nerve Block Duration
Time at which the pain relief from the block has completely worn off
Time frame: Postoperative day 2+
Numerical Rating Scale Pain Scores
The 11-point numeric scale ranges from '0' representing one pain extreme (e.g. "no pain") to '10' representing the other pain extreme (e.g. "pain as bad as you can imagine" or "worst pain imaginable")
Time frame: Duration of stay in recovery room after surgery (average of 3 hours)
Opioid Consumption
Time frame: Postoperative day 2, postoperative day 3
Side Effects
Opioid-related symptom distress scale is calculated using responses to the symptom severity questions only. For each symptom, severity is assessed by the question: "(If yes), how severe was it usually?" (In the past 24 hours) The responses to the severity questions are measured on a 5-point scale from 0-4 in ascending order as follows: Did not have symptom (0) Slight (1) Moderate (2) Severe (3) Very severe (4)
Time frame: Postoperative day 2, postoperative day 3
Block Satisfaction
0-10 scale (0=not satisfied; 10=extremely satisfied)
Time frame: Postoperative day 2, postoperative day 3
Block-related Complications
Time frame: Postoperative day 7-10
% of Participants Who Guessed the Correct Group
Patients will be asked whether they believe they were in the IV dexamethasone or intravenous dexamethasone group
Time frame: Postoperative day 7-10
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