This study compare the "Serratus block plane" (SPB) and the local infiltration of the tissue in the prevention of acute and chronic pain after breast cancer surgery.
Chronic pain after breast surgery may be severe, often requiring the use of morphine. The incidence of chronic pain varies from 27 to 50% depending on definitions. The infiltration of tissues by a local anesthetic is a simple, fast and low risk technique but of limited effectiveness. Serratus the flat block, performed under ultrasound guidance, is minimally invasive and easy to perform. It allows anesthesia and analgesia to an extended part of the anterolateral chest wall and the axilla. This regional anesthesia technique provides good analgesia during and after breast surgery, but remains to be evaluated; beyond perioperative analgesia, the benefit-risk, post operative rehabilitation, and the impact on ambulatory and on chronic pain are fundamental objectives.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
110
postoperative chronic pain assessed using the DN4 questionnaire
DN4 questionnaire
Time frame: 3 months postoperative
postoperative acute pain
Visual analogue scale (V.A.S.)
Time frame: day 1, day 2, day 3 postoperative
morphine consumption
Time frame: day 1, day 2, day 3 postoperative
Wendy Villareal Fernandez, MD
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