* Thoracic incisions are painful and associated with chronic post-surgical pain and inadequate analgesia is associated with poorer postoperative outcomes. Recent progress has been made in the field of thoracic anesthesia by improving analgesic modalities such as PECS 1 and PECS 2, intercostal plane block, paravertebral regional anesthesia, ultrasound-guided erector spinae and serratus anterior plane block. * Administered of the local anesthetic in erector spinae plane block is in the interfascial plane between the transverse process of the vertebra and the erector spinae muscles, spreading to multiple paravertebral spaces. It affects both the ventral and dorsal rami and leading to blockage of both visceral and somatic pain. * Ultrasound-guided serratus anterior plane block is a facial plane block that provides analgesia by blocking of lateral branches of intercostal nerves above or below the serratus plane muscle. * We hypothesize that the ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block may have better quality than the serratus anterior plane block for patients undergoing thoracoscopic sympathectomy as erector spinea plane blocks visceral and somatic pain.
Primary palmar hyperhidrosis (PPH) refers to the excessive secretion of exocrine glands on the palms, which is often accompanied by the head, face, or plantar hyperhidrosis. PPH demonstrates no obvious organic cause; however, some patients may feel distressed because their palms sweat more than normal, and such a situation may lead to severe psychological, social, and occupational dysfunction. Endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy abolishes eccrine sweating in all areas supplied by the postganglionic fibers with its complications which include post-sympathetic neuralgia which is the most important, wound infection, hemorrhage, pneumothorax, horner syndrome, no response to the operation and compensatory hyperhidrosis in non-denervated areas. Forero described ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block for treatment of thoracic neuropathic pain and explained it as a peri-paravertebral regional anesthesia technique that has been used for prevention of postoperative pain in various surgeries. Ultrasound-guided serratus anterior plane block is a facial plane block which provides analgesia by blocking of lateral branches of intercostal nerves above or below the serratus plane muscle. There are few cases and studies in the literature reporting successful analgesia provided by serratus anterior plane block
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
110
Erector Spinae Group (Group E) will receive bilateral ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block using 30 ml hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.25% will be injected between erector spinae muscle and transverse process of T4
Serratus anterior Group (Group S) will undergo bilateral ultrasound-guided serratus anterior plane block with 30 ml hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.25% will be injected above or below serratus anterior muscle at the level of 4th and 5th rib on the midaxillary line
Mansoura University
Al Mansurah, DK, Egypt
RECRUITINGThe total analgesic consumption
cumulative consumption of opioids during the first postoperative day
Time frame: 1st 24 hours after surgery
Postoperative severity of the pain
Visual analogue scale (0-100),where 0 point is equal to no pain and 100 indicate the worst possible pain
Time frame: every 2 hours for 12hours and then at 16, 20 and 24 hours postoperatively
The total amount of fentanyl consumption
cumulative consumption of fentanyl during the first postoperative day
Time frame: 1st 24 hours after surgery
The total amount of paracetamol consumption
cumulative consumption of paracetamol during the first post operative day
Time frame: 1st 24 hours after surgery
Duration of analgesia
from the end of block till the time for the first analgesic requirement (ketorolac)
Time frame: within 24 hours after surgery
Nausea
number of patients with nausea
Time frame: 1st 24 hours after surgery
Vomiting
number of patients with vomiting
Time frame: 1st 24 hours after surgery
Patient Satisfaction
evaluated as 5:excellent, 4:very good, 3:good, 2: fair, 1:poor
Time frame: After 12 and 24 hours after surgery
Heart rate
changes in heart rate
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
Peripheral oxygen saturation
changes in Peripheral oxygen saturation as measured with pulse oximetry
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
End-tidal carbon dioxide tension
changes in end-tidal carbon dioxide tension as measured with capnography
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
systolic blood pressure
changes in systolic blood pressure
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
diastolic blood pressures
changes in diastolic blood pressure
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
mean blood pressures
changes in mean arterial blood pressure
Time frame: Intraoperative (every 10 minutes till the end of surgery)
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