To determine if the epidural route provide an acceptable analgesia in spine surgeries and avoided the need for excessive IV analgesics. Also to determine whatever dexmedetomidine or fentanyl is more better neuroaxial adjuvant regarding providing early onset and prolonged analgesia and stable cardiorespiratory parameters
Relieving post-operative pain of spine surgeries has become an indispensable component in anesthesiology. Various methods have been tried for the management of post-operative pain in spine surgeries out of which regional techniques are becoming most promising. The quality of regional anesthesia has been reported to improve with the addition of opioids (such as morphine, fentanyl, and sufentanil) and other drugs (such as dexmedetomidine, clonidine, magnesium sulfate, neostigmine, ketamine, and midazolam), but no drug to inhibit nociception is without associated adverse effects . α2 adrenergic agonists have both analgesic and sedative properties when used as an adjuvant in regional anesthesia. Dexmedetomidine is an S-enantiomer of medetomidine with a higher specificity for α2-adrenoreceptor (α2 : α1, 1620 : 1) compared to clonidine (α2 : α1, 220 : 1). It was first introduced into practical use as intravenous sedative after the approval of U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1999. Since then it has been investigated as the anxiolytic, sympatholytic, and analgesic properties related to α2-adrenoceptor binding, and it is now being used as a co-analgesic drug. As adjuvant, neuroaxial administration is the appropriate route to dexmedetomidine, because the analgesic effect of α2-agonists mostly occurs at spinal level, and dexmedetomidin's high lipophilicity facilitates rapid absorption into the cerebrospinal fluid and binding to the spinal cord α2-adrenoreceptor. regional-administeration of dexmedetomidine has been shown to exert potent antinociceptive effects in animals. To date, a few studies have reported on the effects of epidural dexmedetomidine combined with local anesthetics in humans. . Administration of an α2-agonist via an intrathecal or epidural route provides an analgesic effect in postoperative pain without severe sedation. This effect is due to the sparing of supraspinal CNS sites from excessive drug exposure, resulting in robust analgesia without heavy sedation . The adverse effects of dexmedetomidine include hypotension, hypertension, nausea, bradycardia, atrial fibrillation, and hypoxia. Fentanyl is one of the short-acting narcotic analgesics with potent morphine-like action . Neuroaxial administration of lipophilic opioids such as Fentanyl and sufentanyl tends to provide a rapid onset of analgesia. Their rapid clearance from cerebrospinal fluid may limit cephalic spread and the development of certain side effects such as delayed respiratory depression
All cases of spine surgery will be done under G.A with the patient in prone position. After surgery an epidural catheter will be placed through a separate skin puncture above the incision The catheter will be positioned up to 7 cm from skin entry directing downwards in the epidural space . Once the patient in the post-operative room will be noted to have pain (VAS) of\>4, the study will start. A test dose of 3 ml lignocaine with adrenaline will be injected the following parameters will be noted . 1. The pain score, by using VAS 2. Onset of analgesia (fall of VAS\<4 ). 3. Peak level of analgesia ( VAS score 0). 4. Duration of analgesia (once the patient asks fwith VAS\>4). 5. Monitoring of NIBP, pulse rate, respiratory rate every 30 min. 6. Side-effects such as nausea, vomiting, respiratory depression, Motor blockade "Bromage scale\>1" Also deep sedation "Ramsay sedation scale\>3" , And shivering and hypotension.
All cases of spine surgery will be done under G.A with the patient in prone position. After surgury an epidural catheter will be placed through a separate skin puncture above the incision The catheter will be positioned up to 7 cm from skin entry directing downwards in the epidural space . Once the patient in the post-operative room will be noted to have pain (VAS) of\>4, the study will start. A test dose of 3 ml lignocaine with adrenaline will be injected the following parameters will be noted . 1. The pain score, by using VAS 2. Onset of analgesia (fall of VAS\<4 ). 3. Peak level of analgesia ( VAS score 0). 4. Duration of analgesia (once the patient asks fwith VAS\>4). 5. Monitoring of NIBP, pulse rate, respiratory rate every 30 min. 6. Side-effects such as nausea, vomiting, respiratory depression, Motor blockade "Bromage scale\>1" Also deep sedation "Ramsay sedation scale\>3" , And shivering and hypotension.
Ahmed Abdalla Mohamed
Cairo, Egypt
Post-operative analgesia duration assessment
The duration of effective analgesia; "it is the duration of complete pain relief (zero pain) and ends by the appearance of any pain (even VAS is of one)."
Time frame: 24 hours
Post-operative assessment of pain
Post-operative assessment of pain using The Visual Analogue Scale (VAS: 0= no pain and 10 = worst possible pain).
Time frame: 24 hours
Complete sensory and motor block
Time taken to achieve complete sensory and motor block
Time frame: 24 hours
Sedation assessment
Post operative assessment of sedation using modified Ramsay scale (Grade 1, Patient is anxious and agitated or restless, 2, Patient is co-operative, oriented, and tranquil, 3, Patient responds to commands only; 4, Patient exhibits brisk response to light glabellar tap or loud auditory stimulus,5, Patient exhibits a sluggish response to light glabellar tap or loud auditory stimulus,6, Patient exhibits no response )
Time frame: 24 hours
Heart rate monitoring
Perioperative hemodynamics
Time frame: 24 hours
Mean arterial blood pressure
Perioperative hemodynamics
Time frame: 24 hours
Vomiting assessment
Post-operative assessment of vomiting
Time frame: 24 hours
Itching assessment
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Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
60
All cases of spine surgery will be done under G.A with the patient in prone position. After surgury an epidural catheter will be placed through a separate skin puncture above the incision The catheter will be positioned up to 7 cm from skin entry directing downwards in the epidural space . Once the patient in the post-operative room will be noted to have pain (VAS) of\>4, the study will start. A test dose of 3 ml lignocaine with adrenaline will be injected the following parameters will be noted . 1. The pain score, by using VAS 2. Onset of analgesia (fall of VAS\<4 ). 3. Peak level of analgesia ( VAS score 0). 4. Duration of analgesia (once the patient asks fwith VAS\>4). 5. Monitoring of NIBP, pulse rate, respiratory rate every 30 min. 6. Side-effects such as nausea, vomiting, respiratory depression, Motor blockade "Bromage scale\>1" Also deep sedation "Ramsay sedation scale\>3" , And shivering and hypotension.
Post-operative assessment of itching
Time frame: 24 hours
Urine retention assessment
Post-operative assessment of urine retention
Time frame: 24 hours
Post-operative Neusea
Post-operative Neusea assessment
Time frame: 24 hours