The aim of our study is to determine the superior procedure in analgesia management by comparing the traditional wound infiltration technique with the ultrasound-guided bilateral erector spina plan block technique in spinal surgery patients.
Patients in ASA I-II-III risk group aged 18-80 who will undergo spinal surgery by Trakya University Faculty of Medicine, Brain and Nerve Surgery will be included. In this study, patient data will be collected in the form of file scanning. Intra-operative; hemodynamic data of patients; heart rate, blood pressure values, anesthetic and other drugs applied, surgery and anesthesia durations will be written from the anesthesia document after the operation is over. In the study, the application preferred by the anesthesiologist for the patient will not be intervened. The patients will be divided into three groups; wound infiltration technique was applied, ultrasound-guided bilateral erector spina plan block technique was applied and both techniques were applied together. After the operation; pain values will be calculated by VAS at the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th, 12th and 24th hours of the patients. The patient's length of stay, satisfaction (excellent, good, moderate, poor) and methods used for analgesia will be recorded. With the results collected in our study, it will be determined which procedure is superior in pain management for spine surgery.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
75
The VAS is a widely used tool in research and clinical practice, and its reliability and validity in pain assessment has been clearly demonstrated. It consists of a 100 mm line. 0 cm no pain, 10 cm is associated with 'worst possible pain'. The patient is asked to mark the line to 'score' the pain. VAS values of 1cm - 3cm weak, 4cm - 6cm moderate, and \>7cm are the indicators of "severe pain".
The patient's satisfaction with postoperative pain treatment will be recorded. 4 options; excellent, good, medium and bad.
Trakya University
Edirne, Centrum, Turkey (Türkiye)
Visual Analog Score
It consists of a 100mm line. 0cm no pain, 10cm is associated with 'worst possible pain'. The patient is asked to mark a line to 'score' the pain. VAS values of 1cm-3cm weak, 4cm-6cm moderate, and \>7cm are the indicators of "severe pain".After the operation; pain values will be calculated by VAS at the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th, 12th and 24th hours of the patients.
Time frame: postoperative 24 hours score change
patient satisfaction
The patient's satisfaction with postoperative pain treatment will be recorded. 4 options; excellent, good, medium and bad.
Time frame: postoperative 24 hours score change
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.