Effective pain relief after cardiac surgery has assumed importance with the introduction of fast track discharge protocols that requires early weaning from mechanical ventilation. Inadequate pain control reduces the capacity to cough, mobility, increases the frequency of atelectasis, and prolongs recovery. Infiltration of local anesthetics near the surgical wound has shown to improve early postoperative pain in various surgical procedures. Magnesium is the fourth most plentiful cation in our body. It has antinociceptive effects in animal and human models of pain.
Effective pain relief after cardiac surgery has assumed importance with the introduction of fast track discharge protocols that requires early weaning from mechanical ventilation. Inadequate pain control reduces the capacity to cough, mobility, increases the frequency of atelectasis, and prolongs recovery. A major cause of pain after cardiac surgery is the median sternotomy particularly on the first two postoperative days. The most often used analgesics in these patients are parenteral opioids which can lead to undesirable side-effects as sedation, respiratory depression, nausea, and vomiting. Infiltration of local anesthetics near the surgical wound has shown to improve early postoperative pain in various surgical procedures. Magnesium is the fourth most plentiful cation in our body. It has antinociceptive effects in animal and human models of pain. It has been mentioned in a systematic review that it may be worthwhile to further study the role of supplemental magnesium in providing perioperative analgesia, because this is a relatively harmless molecule, is not expensive and also because the biological basis for its potential antinociceptive effect is promising. These effects are primarily based on physiological calcium antagonism, that is voltage-dependent regulation of calcium influx into the cell, and noncompetitive antagonism of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. postoperative pain control will be by 1gm paracetamol / 6 hr, Ketorolac tromethamine 30 mg / 8:12 hour in control group vs bupivacaine 0.125% plus magnesium sulfate 5% through a single catheter after parasternal block in in study group after cardiac surgery. The investigators primary outcome is pain scores assessment , the secondary outcomes are extubation time, postoperative respiratory parameters, serum cortisol level
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Each patient will receive bupivacaine 0.125% with 5% magnesium sulphate by infusion through a catheter used for epidural analgesia, positioned presternal.
Emad Zarief Kamel Said
Asyut, Asyut Governorate, Egypt
Pain assessment using a VAS
Pain score postoperatively on patient's arrival at the ICU, every 4 h for 12 h then every 6 h for 48 h using a VAS (0 = no pain, 10-the worst pain imaginable)
Time frame: up to day 2 postoperative
serum cortisol level
assessing evening serum cortisol
Time frame: first and second postoperative day
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Purpose
OTHER
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
40