compare the analgesic efficacy of the combination of bupivacaine and morphine, bupivacaine and fentanyl and bupivacaine and ketamine in alleviating post operative pain following laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is comparatively advantageous over open cholecystectomy in pain management with shorter duration of hospital stays. Pain management is medically pertinent for optimal care in surgical patients. Although development and advancement in understanding of the patho-physiology of pain, analgesics, pharmacology and the development of better effective techniques for post-operative pain control, patients still continue to experience considerable discomfort. Laparotomy results in parietal pain, whereas laparoscopy has a visceral component, a somatic component and shoulder pain secondary to diaphragmatic irritation because of CO2 pneumo-peritoneum. Postoperative pain associated with laparoscopic cholecystectomy, although less severe and of shorter duration than that after open cholecystectomy, is still a source of marked discomfort and surgical stress. The degree of the pain after laparoscopic procedures has multifactorial influence including the volume of residual gas, type of gas used for pneumo-peritoneum, pressure created by the pneumo-peritoneum and insufflated gas temperature. Local anesthetic infiltration of the incision sites decreases postoperative opiate requirement and improves subjective pain scores but does eliminate the pain. Earlier scientists have also reported several beneficial effects of the intra-peritoneal application of bupivacaine with morphine on postoperative pain management after laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
120
post operative pain
All subjects will be familiar with the visual analogue scale of pain (VAS) score preoperatively and will be instructed in detail on its use as a tool for measuring postoperative pain The pain VAS is a continuous scale comprised of a horizontal (HVAS) or vertical (VVAS) line, usually 10 centimeters (100 mm) in length, anchored by 2 verbal descriptors, one for each symptom extreme . A higher score indicates greater pain intensity. Based on the distribution of pain VAS scores in postsurgical patients (knee replacement, hysterectomy, or laparoscopic myomectomy) who described their postoperative pain intensity as none, mild, moderate, or severe, the following cut points on the pain VAS have been recommended: no pain (0-4 mm), mild pain (5-44 mm), moderate pain (45-74 mm), and severe pain (75- 100 mm) .
Time frame: 24 hours
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ketamine (0.5 mg/kg).