The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the use of bupivacaine and lidocaine as local anesthetics in carpal tunnel release surgery. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Are there any differences in pain after surgery? * Are there any differences in postoperative analgesic consumption?
The Wide-Awake Local Anesthesia No Tourniquet (WALANT) technique has become popular for hand surgery in the past decade. It consists of injecting a local anesthetic and epinephrine into the surgical site. Lidocaine, a short-acting local anesthetic, is used in the classic description. Adding a long-acting local anesthetic, such as bupivacaine, has been suggested for long surgeries. However, the use of bupivacaine in shorter-duration procedures could combine the advantages of ambulatory surgery without a tourniquet with long-acting analgesia, improving postoperative pain and reducing the consumption of analgesics. Patients undergoing first-time open carpal tunnel release surgery will be randomized to receive bupivacaine or lidocaine. Randomization will be generated by computer using random block sizes of 2 or 4 with an allocation ratio of 1:1. Postoperatively, patients will receive standard medical care. It consists of 50 mg of diclofenac to take when they feel pain (with a minimum interval of 8 hours). Patients will be instructed to complete a medication log for pain and analgesic consumption. A blinded investigator will contact them by phone at 24 hours and 48hs. At two weeks, they will be controlled by research staff for complications. Eighty-two patients will be recruited, 41 per arm, assuming a 20% loss. The sample size was calculated using a 90% power and 5% significance level. The objective was to detect a minimum difference of 2 points on a numeric scale ranging from 0 to 10 with a standard deviation of 2.5 points.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
82
Patients will receive 20 ml of 1% lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine (buffered 10:1 with 8.4% sodium bicarbonate). Thirty minutes before carpal tunnel release surgery, 10 mL will be injected subcutaneously, and 10 mL will be injected into the carpal tunnel.
Bupivacaine: Patients will receive 10 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine + 10 ml of 1% lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine (buffered 10:1 with 8.4% sodium bicarbonate). Thirty minutes before carpal tunnel release surgery, 10 mL will be injected subcutaneously, and 10 mL will be injected into the carpal tunnel.
Hospital italiano de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires, Other, Argentina
Postoperative Pain
Visual analog scale, numerical scale from 0 to 10
Time frame: Change in pain at 24 and 48 hours or when the patients take analgesics
Time until pain
Time in hours (numeric) from surgery until the patient feel pain
Time frame: Until 48 hours from surgery
Amount of analgesic
The number of analgesics consumed by the patient. Numeric
Time frame: at 24 and 48 hours
Pain during anesthesia
Visual analog scale, numerical scale from 0 to 10
Time frame: 1 minute after the injection of local anesthesia
interruption of sleep due to pain
Did the patient wake up because of pain the first night?, Categorical, Yes or No
Time frame: at 24 hours
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