In upper extremity surgeries, the brachial plexus block can be performed with different techniques at various levels depending on the proximal and distal level of the surgery. In this study, we aim to compare the different approaches of US guided costoclavicular technique. Lateral approache is more common for the costoclavicular block area. However, more needle maneuvers are needed especially in pediatric patients because of the coracoid process. Medial approach is recommended to overcome this problem. Thus demonstrate the safety of upper extremity blocks, which is an important part of multimodal analgesia, and to determine the most ideal technique in the pediatric patient group who will undergo upper extremity surgery. During the block application, the US imaging time, the difficulty level of needle imaging, the number of maneuvers required to reach the target image, whether additional maneuvers are required according to the local anesthetic distribution, the success of the block and the duration of the surgery, the total application time of the block and the duration of general anesthesia will be recorded. Mean arterial pressure and heart rate will be recorded at 30-minute intervals during the surgery. Standardized for pediatric patients The FLACC and Wong-Baker pain scores will be followed first 24 hours after surgery. The patient will be examined for motor and sensation, and analgesic doses will be recorded if used. Time to first pain identification, duration of sleep, patient and surgeon satisfaction will be recorded.
Peripheral nerve blocks; It is widely used in daily practice for anesthesia or as a part of multimodal analgesia in most surgical procedures. In upper extremity surgeries, the brachial plexus block can be performed with different techniques at various levels depending on the proximal and distal level of the surgery. In this study, the aim is to compare postoperative analgesic effects of these two ultrasound-guided techniques in pediatric patients. In this study, we aim to compare the different approaches of US guided costoclavicular technique. Lateral approache is more common for the costoclavicular block area. However, more needle maneuvers are needed especially in pediatric patients because of the coracoid process. Medial approach is recommended to overcome this problem. Thus demonstrate the safety of upper extremity blocks, which is an important part of multimodal analgesia, and to determine the most ideal technique in the pediatric patient group who will undergo upper extremity surgery. During the block application, the US imaging time, the difficulty level of needle imaging, the number of maneuvers required to reach the target image, whether additional maneuvers are required according to the local anesthetic distribution, the success of the block and the duration of the surgery, the total application time of the block and the duration of general anesthesia will be recorded. Mean arterial pressure and heart rate will be recorded at 30-minute intervals during the surgery. Standardized for pediatric patients The FLACC and Wong-Baker pain scores will be followed first 24 hours after surgery. The patient will be examined for motor and sensation, and analgesic doses will be recorded if used. Time to first pain identification, duration of sleep, patient and surgeon satisfaction will be recorded.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
55
1 mg/kg Bupivacaine (0.25%)
Istanbul University
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
Number of needle maneuvers
Number of needle maneuvers according to local anesthetic distribution
Time frame: Up to 15 minutes
Ideal USG guided brachial plexus cords visualization/needle pathway planning time
Practitioner's ideal image acquisition time
Time frame: Up to 15 minutes
Needle tip and shaft imaging visualization
Likert scale: 1-5
Time frame: Up to 15 minutes
Requirement of additional needle maneuver due to insufficient local anesthetic distribution
Extra needle redirection to cover neural tissue
Time frame: Up to 15 minutes
Total procedure difficulty according to the anesthesiologist
Likert Scale 1-5 (1:very hard 5:very easy)
Time frame: Up to 15 minutes
Patient number requiring rescue analgesics
If a ≥ 20% increase above preinduction values in MAP or HR was observed during the perioperative period, additional fentanyl dose (1 μg/kg) was applied intravenously.
Time frame: Intraoperative 2-4 hours
Face, Legs Activity, Cry, Consolability (FLACC) scores
It corporates five categories of behavior, each scored on 0-2 point scale so that total score ranges from 0 to 10. Total scores of 0-3 is defined as mild or no pain, 4-7 as moderate, and 8-10 as severe pain.
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Wong Baker FACES scale
The scale shows a series of faces ranging from a happy face at 0, or "no hurt", to a crying face at 10, which represents "hurts like the worst pain imaginable"
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Motor blockade physical examination
Each nerve scored on 0-2 point scale so that total score ranges from 0 to 8. Total scores of 0 point is defined as absent motor blockade (full movement); 1 point as partial blockade (able to free movement only) or 2 point as complete blockade (unable to move). (Separately for these four nerves; N. Medianus, N. ulnaris, N. radialis and N. musculocutaneous).
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Sensorial blockade physical examination
Each nerve scored on 0-2 point scale with pinprick test so that total score ranges from 0 to 8. Total scores of 0 point is defined as absent sensorial blockade (feels pain), 1 point as partial blockade (feels touch) or 2 point as complete blockade (no sense). (Separately for these four nerves; N. Medianus, N. ulnaris, N. radialis and N. musculocutaneous).
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Time to first pain
Time to first analgesic
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Patient number requiring additional analgesix
Number of patients who require IV morphine (0.03 mg/kg) and paracetamol (15 mg/kg)
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Sleeping duration
Total hours of sleep first day
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Complications/side effects
Possible complications related to costoclavicular block (such as vascular puncture, hematoma, pneumothorax, diaphragma palsy...)
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Family satisfaction
Satisfaction score: 0: very unsatisfied 3: very satisfied
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
Surgeon satisfaction
Satisfaction score: 0: very unsatisfied, 3: very satisfied
Time frame: Up to 24 hours
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