This is a prospective randomized trial evaluating the effect of SCPB on reported patient pain following IJCL placement as compared to local infiltrate.
The goal of this study is to determine if SCPBs provide more pain control than local infiltrate of anesthetic for internal jugular venous cannulation. The investigators hypothesis that patients who receive the SCPB will have a lower VAS rating on average than those who receive local infiltration following internal jugular venous cannulation. To test this, the investigators will be approaching eligible patients for inclusion in a research study. If the patients consent, the patients will be randomly assigned the standard of care treatment or the SCPB. The investigators will then ask the patients to rate pain following insertion of the central line. The investigators will also evaluate different aspects of the patient's hospital course to evaluate their outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
14
Location of injection for block.
Local infiltration location.
Cleveland Clinic Akron General
Akron, Ohio, United States
Visual Analog Scale Rating
The average Visual Analog Scale (VAS) rating in patients who receive the SCPB during internal jugular venous cannulation versus the average VAS in patients receiving local infiltration. The scale is from 0-10, with 0 meaning no pain and 10 meaning the most pain I have ever experienced.
Time frame: 30 minutes post central line placement
Complications
To determine if SCPBs are associated with higher complication rates than local infiltration with internal jugular venous cannulation. Complications will be defined as arterial injury, lacerations of the vena cava, mediastinal vessels, and right atrium, hematoma formation, retained guide wire, pulmonary complications including pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, chylothorax, tracheal injury, injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerve, and air embolus, tracheal injury, arrhythmia, cardiac arrest, device dysfunction, device infection, and venous thrombosis.
Time frame: Duration of emergency department and inpatient encounter, typically no more than 7 days.
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