The purpose of this study is to determine the minimum dose of ropivacaine 0.5%, required to produce pain relief without weakening the leg muscles.
The post-operative period after a Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) is known to be especially painful for the first 24 hours. Significant pain can persist up to 3 days in some cases. Successful management of pain post TKA is therefore regarded as essential to early recovery, rehabilitation and timely discharge. Until now, multiple modes of analgesia have been employed including intravenous patient-controlled analgesia, continuous femoral nerve block and epidural analgesia. These are all effective alternatives but each is limited by side effects. Epidural analgesia provides excellent pain control and has been associated with early rehabilitation despite its negative impact on ambulation in the immediate peri-operative period. Additionally, an increased risk of spinal hematoma has been reported with epidural analgesia and peri-operative low molecular weight heparin prophylaxis. For this reason, epidural analgesia is not routinely offered to patients undergoing TKA today. A multimodal analgesic approach centered on the use of continuous femoral nerve blocks has been more recently favoured, providing superior analgesia and less opioid-related side effects than a systemic opioid-based regimen. However, femoral nerve blockade is also associated with significant quadriceps muscle weakness, which can impair ambulation, delay physiotherapy and result in accidental fall. Recent reports suggest that saphenous nerve blockade using an adductor canal approach is a novel technique with which to provide adequate analgesia for major knee surgery. Ultrasound-guided saphenous nerve block in the adductor canal is considered a technically simple and reliable block, providing consistent success. Although traditionally used to provide anesthesia and analgesia to the foot and ankle, recent reports suggest that saphenous nerve blockade in the adductor canal may provide adequate analgesia for major knee surgery. Taking into consideration the anatomy of the adductor canal, it appears possible to target not only the saphenous nerve but also multiple branches of the femoral and obturator nerve. However, the optimal dose of local anesthetic required to establish knee analgesia without inducing quadriceps weakness has not yet been determined. Identifying an optimal dose would allow for maximum analgesic efficacy with minimal or no motor block, while minimizing other unwanted adverse effects. This pilot study is designed to determine the optimal dose of ropivacaine 0.5% required to initiate sensory knee analgesia for the post-operative.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
The volume of local anesthetic Ropivacaine 0.5% will be determined by the response (success or failure of block, 30 minutes after local anesthetic injection) of the previous patient in that group. Block success is defined as an absence of ice sensation in the knee within 30 min of ropivacaine administration accompanied by tolerance to tetanic electrical stimulation (TES) at 60 mA(milliamp) for 5 seconds.
Toronto Western Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Tolerance to Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation (TES)
To determine the minimum effective dose of ropivacaine in the adductor canal block to initiate sensory analgesia in the knee. Complete sensory anesthesia in the knee following adductor canal block 30 minutes after ropivacaine administration.
Time frame: 30 min after ropivacaine injection
The degree of motor block following ropivacaine administration
Motor block will be assessed using an isometric force dynamometer
Time frame: Assessments will start at baseline before ropivacaine injection and every 5 minutes after ropivacaine injection until 45 minutes have passed or until surgery commences, whichever comes first
Cold sensation
To determine the minimum effective dose of ropivacaine in the adductor canal block to initiate sensory analgesia in the knee. Complete sensory anesthesia in the knee following adductor canal block 30 minutes after ropivacaine administration.
Time frame: 30 min after ropivacaine injection
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