The primary aim of this prospective, randomized study is to evaluate the effect of erector spinae block (ESP) on quality of recovery with the QoR-40 questionnaire in patients undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy, one of the most common general surgical procedures, is the gold standard for the treatment of symptomatic gallbladder diseases. Although it is considered as minimally invasive surgery, pain in the early postoperative period is still meaningful. Proper pain control is essential for optimizing clinical outcomes and earlier ambulation after surgery. Traditional pain management with opioids provide good pain control, however, have undesirable side effects such as nausea, vomiting, and respiratory depression. Multimodal analgesia strategies with different classes of analgesics or local anesthetics may enhance pain relief and reduce side effects after surgery. The ESP a newer regional nerve blockade, has been used as part of a multimodal strategy to optimize postoperative pain control. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of ESP block on postoperative recovery quality in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy with QoR-40 recovery questionnaire. Secondary aim is to assess the effect of ESP block on postoperative pain, nausea, and vomiting. Study hypothesize is that patients who receive an ESP block in addition to the current standard of care, consisting of parenteral opioids and paracetamol, will have a clinically significant improvement in their QoR-40 at postoperative day 1 and lower pain levels, as measured by NRS in comparison to those patients who receive the current standard of care along.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
82
A linear ultrasound transducer will be place in a longitudinal parasagittal orientation about 3 cm lateral to spinous process. Local anesthetic mixture will be injected bilaterally into the fascial plane on the deep aspect of erector spinae muscle. Standard perioperative and postoperative analgesia protocol will be given and postoperative pain levels will be determined by Numerical rating scale (NRS).
Standard perioperative and postoperative analgesia protocol will be given consisting of paracetamol 1 gr IV and tenoxicam 20 mg IV initiated after induction of anesthesia. At the end of the operation patients will receive contramal 1 mg/kg IV before extubation. Postoperative pain levels will be determined by Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) system, 20 minutes intervals in the first hour and at 2th, 6th, 12th and 24 th hour. For the first hour in the postoperative care unit, tramadol 50 mg IV will be given for rescue analgesia with minimum 20 minutes between doses, in patients showing a NRS ≥ 4. Paracetamol 1 g / 12 hour will be given during ward follow-up. In the ward in patients showing a NRS ≥ 4 tramadol 50 mg IV will be given for analgesia.
Konya Education and Training Hospital
Konya, Turkey (Türkiye)
Quality of Recovery (QoR-40) score
QoR-40, a 40-item questionnaire that provides a global score and subscores across five dimensions: patient support, comfort, emotions, physical independence, and pain. Each item is rated on a scale of 1-5, providing a minimum score of 40 and maximum of 200.
Time frame: postoperative 24 hour
Postoperative pain: numeric rating scale (NRS)
NRS use numbers to rate pain from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain).
Time frame: Postoperative 24 hours
Analgesic consumption
Total opioid consumption after the surgery
Time frame: Postoperative 24 hour
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