The investigators are looking to recruit patients into a study demonstrating the effectiveness of a superficial nerve block involving the thoracolumbar interfascial plane (TLIP) in reducing postoperative pain in those undergoing spinal surgery
Patients undergoing spine surgery with or without fusion experience a great deal of pain especially in the first 3 days after surgery. Spine surgeons are looking for ways to reduce the pain that you experience. Anesthesiologists have introduced a procedure, called a "TLIP block" to provide pain relief. The block involves injecting local anesthetic (numbing pain medication) in the lower back around the site of the surgery. This block has been used by other surgeons for other types of surgeries in the past and has been shown to work. To determine how effective the block is, the investigators are conducting this investigational study where pain severity in patients who receive one of 2 kinds of local anesthetic or placebo are compared
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
90
Use of liposomal bupivicaine as intraoperative local anesthesia
Use of bupivicaine as intraoperative local anesthesia
Use of saline as placebo for local anesthesia
Cooper University Hospital
Camden, New Jersey, United States
RECRUITINGReduction in postoperative pain
Using Visual Analog Scales on a scale of 0-10, where 0 is no pain and 10 is the worst pain
Time frame: 24-48 hours
Total postoperative opioid requirements
Using daily MME
Time frame: 1-5 days
Time to Ambulation
Daily physical therapy evaluations where ambulation is recorded and time from surgery is documented
Time frame: 1-5 days
Length of Hospital Stay
Number of postoperative days
Time frame: 1-5 days
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