To evaluate the postoperative analgesic effect of combined use of Naldebain® and thoracic paravertebral block in thoracoscopic surgery
Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) can be associated with stronger postoperative pain than is commonly believed. Pain control after thoracic surgery is important because increased acute pain has been shown to increase the incidence of chronic pain, and untreated pain may lead to increased morbidity. It is generally accepted to introduce multimodal analgesic strategies based on regional blockade, opioids and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Paravertebral block (PVB) involves the injection of local anesthetic into a wedge-shaped space lateral to the spinal nerves as they emerge from intervertebral foramina. It produces ipsilateral somatosensory and sympathetic nerve blockade effective for anesthesia as well as for management of pain of unilateral origin from the chest and abdomen. So far, thoracic paravertebral block (TPVB) is the most common technique used for patients undergoing VATS. TPVB may be useful after VATS because a single injection of local anesthesia may provide effective analgesia for the intense short-duration pain that patients experience. Nalbuphine sebacate (Naldebain®) is a long-acting prodrug of nalbuphine developed for meeting the unmet medical need of long-acting analgesics. It is a synthetic opioid agonist-antagonist analgesic of the phenanthrene series. It is chemically related to both the widely used opioid antagonist, naloxone, and the potent opioid analgesic, oxymorphone. The currently proposed clinical use of nalbuphine sebacate is a single dose of Naldebain® administered intramuscularly approximately 24 h prior to the planned surgery for pain relief. The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of TPVB combined with a single dose of intramuscular Naldebain® administered preoperatively to patients scheduled to undergo VATS.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
60
ultrasound-guided intramuscular injection after the induction of anesthesia immediately
Department of Anesthesiology, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital
Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
RECRUITINGpostoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: During the first one hour in the recovery room, the pain intensity was evaluated every 15 minutes.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 3 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 6 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 12 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 24 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 36 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 48 hours after surgery.
postoperative analgesic effect
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Use the visual analogue scale (VAS) score to assess the degree of pain after surgery
Time frame: the pain intensity was evaluated at 72 hours after surgery.