Patients undergoing spine surgery frequently experience significant pain after surgery. This can limit patient activity and hinder rehabilitation. If inadequately treated, severe pain can result in emotional and psychological distress and ultimately impact long-term function, and increase the risk of developing pain that lasts longer than six months associated with depression, anxiety and disability. More specifically, Erector Spinae Plane (ESP) block is a recently described plane block designed to block the dorsal and ventral rami of the thoracic spinal nerves. It has shown to be an effective modality for postoperative pain management as a part of multimodal analgesia in spinal surgery.
Patients undergoing spine surgery frequently experience significant pain after surgery. Currently, standard management of acute pain after surgery consists mainly of systemic opioid narcotics and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Generally, opiates and NSAIDs are not completely effective at managing pain, and they carry significant risk of addiction and overdose, particularly with prolonged or increased dosing. The concept of multimodal or ''balanced'' analgesia is rapidly becoming the 'standard of care' for preventing post-operative pain. It consists of the use of combinations of analgesics of different classes with different sites of action in an attempt to provide superior pain relief with reduced analgesic related side effects. Local anesthetic injection to block specific nerves has been widely recognized as a useful adjunct in a multimodal approach to postoperative pain management. Erector Spinae Plane (ESP) block is a recently described plane block designed to block the dorsal and ventral rami of the thoracic spinal nerves. It has shown to be an effective modality for postoperative pain management as a part of multimodal analgesia in spinal surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
52
Bilateral ESP block at T1 level with 20 ml of 1:1 mixture (2% Lidocaine: 0.5% bupivacaine)
Bilateral ESP block at T1 level with 20 ml of 0.9% normal saline
Toronto Western Hospital?UHN
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
RECRUITINGQuality of Recovery 40 Questionnaire
the global Quality of Recovery-40 aggregate score is a scale from (1 to 5, where: 1 = very poor and 5 = excellent)
Time frame: 24 hours after surgery.
Postoperative pain
is a visual analog scale from (1 to 10, where: 1 is the mildest and 10 the worst possible)
Time frame: 2 weeks and one month
Opioids consumption
Patient Opioid/Non-Opioid Pain Medications Diary Card After Surgery
Time frame: 2 weeks and one month
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