Many counties in sub-Saharan Africa have very limited post-operative nursing capacity, and relatively little data have been published about post-operative maternal pain control in these settings. Cesarean section is the most common type of major operation at our institution, Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital (MRRH), in south-western Uganda.Nursing ward staffing capacity is low, with much basic nursing care provided by families and friends of patients. The investigators conducted a study to examine the impact of ITM versus TAP block in a setting of limited formal nursing oversight.
Intrathecal morphine (ITM), administered as a part of spinal anesthesia for caesarian section, can produce significant post-operative analgesia for several hours. The Tranversus Abdominis Plane (TAP) Block can also provide prolonged post-operative pain control. A small number of published studies comparing analgesic outcomes after cesarian section with ITM or TAP block have reported variable results.Moreover, these studies have been conducted in countries with extensive post-operative nursing care. Many counties in sub-Saharan Africa have very limited post-operative nursing capacity, and relatively little data have been published about post-operative maternal pain control in these settings. Cesarean section is the most common type of major operation at our institution, Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital (MRRH), in south-western Uganda.Nursing ward staffing capacity is low, with much basic nursing care provided by families and friends of patients. The investigators conducted a study to examine the impact of ITM versus TAP block in a setting of limited formal nursing oversight.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
130
ITM group were given 100 micrograms of preservative-free morphine in addition to the local anaesthesia (plain hyperbaric bupivacaine 10mgs) intrathecally during the spinal anaesthesia
Pain measurement
Pain measurement using the numerical rating scale (NRS).
Time frame: at 8 hours after intervention
Pain measurement
Pain measurement using the numerical rating scale (NRS).
Time frame: at 16 hours after intervention
Pain measurement
Pain measurement using the numerical rating scale (NRS)
Time frame: at 24 hours after intervention
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