Postoperative pain is the most undesired consequence of surgery, and if not managed adequately, can lead to delayed recovery and increased hospital stay. Surveys continue to reveal that postoperative pain is insufficiently managed throughout the first world, let alone in the Third World. An American survey over 20 years showed that only one in four patients had adequate relief of postoperative pain. This has led recovery room protocols to include pain as a fifth vital sign that needs to be addressed before patients are discharged to the ward
This prospective, randomized, double-blinded, parallel assignment clinical trial will be done after receiving approval from the local ethics committee of the Faculty of Medicine, Assiut University. A written informed consent will be taken after discussing a detailed description of the study with the patients. Patients will be allocated randomly into two equal groups by computer programs and will be contained in sealed opaque envelopes. Patients will be premedicated with midazolam (0.1mg/kg), 30 min before the operation. Patients will be monitored with ECG, non-invasive blood pressure, heart rate, temperature, oxygen saturation, exhaled CO2 (end tidal capnography), and train of four. In both groups, general anesthesia will be induced with propofol (2mg/kg) and fentanyl (1 mcg/kg). Tracheal intubation will be facilitated with cisatracurium 0.1 mg/kg. Anesthesia will be maintained with isoflurane (1-2 %) and cisatracurium (0.05 mg/kg per dose). Fentanyl (0.5mcg/kg) will be repeated if heart rate (HR) and/or mean arterial pressure (MAP) rise 20 % above baseline values. After the end of anesthesia induction and before surgical procedure Technique of ultrasound guided paravertebral block will be done in both groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
60
Ultrasound guided paravertebral block with bupivacaine
Ultrasound guided paravertebral block with dexmedetomidine
Faculty of Medicine
Asyut, Egypt
post-thoracotomy pain
5\. Pain scores at rest and on coughing will be recorded using visual analogue scale (VAS) pain intensities at rest and during coughing/movement assessed by VAS score. The quality of effective analgesia will be expressed as VAS values derived from the VAS pain score, at rest and during coughing during each assessment period (2 h, at 4, 8 and 24 h).
Time frame: within first 24 hours after Video Assisted Thoracoscopy Surgery
pulmonary function tests
done preoperatively and at postoperative period
Time frame: within first 24 hours after Video Assisted Thoracoscopy Surgery
rescue analgesia
Consumption of IV rescue analgesia attained with ketorolac tromethamine (30 mg per dose).
Time frame: within first 24 hours after Video Assisted Thoracoscopy Surgery
sedation score
Richmond Agitation Sedation Score
Time frame: within first 24 hours after Video Assisted Thoracoscopy Surgery
nausea, vomiting
nausea, vomiting
Time frame: within first 24 hours after Video Assisted Thoracoscopy Surgery
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