The study is a double-blind randomized, placebo controlled trial examining the impact of perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on PACU recovery metrics. Patients with operative facial fractures are randomized to receive either bupivacaine or saline injections prior to the anesthesia emergence.
Effective pain management is critical to successful postoperative care and is known to decrease patient morbidity, incurred patient and hospital costs, and length of hospital stay. Pain and nausea after surgery for traumatic facial fractures can limit patients' early morbidity, oral intake, and ability to communicate. The study is a double-blind randomized, placebo controlled trial examining the impact of perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on PACU recovery metrics. Patients with operative mandibular or midface fractures are randomized to receive either bupivacaine or saline injections prior to the anesthesia emergence. The primary outcome measure is the amount of opioid that patients receive in PACU in morphine milligram equivalent (MMEs). The purpose of the study is to define whether a perioperative bupivacaine nerve block results in a decrease in the amounts of opioids and antiemetics that patients receive in PACU after CMF trauma surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
70
injection
injection
Washington University
St Louis, Missouri, United States
RECRUITINGImpact of a perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on PACU opioid use as assessed by the amount of opioids received in morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs).
To evaluate the impact of a perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on PACU opioid use in patients undergoing operative fixation of facial fractures compared to placebo nerve block assessment of the amount of opioids that patients receive in PACU in morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) will be calculated.
Time frame: day 1 or the day of surgery
Impact of a perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on antiemetic use as assessed by the numbers who receive opioids and antiemetics, amount of antiemetics, pain score, frequency of emesis, and time until discharge.
To evaluate the impact of a perioperative bupivacaine nerve block on PACU antiemetic use in patients undergoing operative fixation of facial fractures compared to placebo nerve block. Additional variables that will be collected perioperatively include the medications used for induction/maintenance of anesthesia as well as intraoperative analgesia (I.e. fentanyl, hydromorphone, morphine, acetaminophen, ketorolac, etc.), operative time, estimated blood loss, and intraoperative complications.
Time frame: within 1 month post surgery
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