Children can experience substantial pain after hip operations, causing agitation, depression, and sleep disruption, which can have a negative impact on their health. Opioids are associated with several serious side effects that limits its use as solo agents for pain management. Regional blocks such as caudal Block (CB) and pericapsular nerve group (PENG) block in adjuvant with general anaesthesia are alternative perioperative analgesic techniques that lead to lesser side effects, including motor weakness, postoperative nausea and vomiting with decreased opioid consumption.
Regional anesthesia is often used to prevent postoperative pain in pediatric surgery. Combined with general anesthesia (GA), ultrasound (US)-guided regional anesthetic approaches provide simple intraoperative pathway that reduced GA requirements, lower pain score with less impact on the respiratory or cardiovascular system In pediatric surgery, caudal block (CB) is a low-cost, simple, and effective procedure for postoperative analgesia. CB is suggested for most surgeries in the lower body, primarily below the umbilicus. Although the well-established anesthetic properties of CB, its action terminates early in the postoperative period and it has a number of restrictions, such as anatomical abnormalities or infection at the injection site, that can prevent its use PENG block is the plane lying between the psoas muscle and tendon and the ilio-pubic eminence. The single-shot PENG block has lately been reported in the cadaveric study and in the literature for perioperative pain management in hip surgery by aiming the articular arms of the accessory obturator nerve (AON), femoral nerve (FN), and obturator nerve (ON). The technical simplicity of imaging in traction-fixed patients and no need for multiple punctures made this blockage ideal for young pediatric patients. Unfortunately, there are no adequate studies regarding PENG block in patients younger than five years old. This study was carried out to assess ultrasound-guided PENG block versus CB for their efficacy, safety and pain management in pediatric hip surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
80
USG-guided single-shot PENG in a dose of 0.5 ml/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine per side.
USG-guided single-shot CEB in a dose of 0.5 mL/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine.
Samar Rafik Mohamed Amin
Banhā, Qalyubia Governorate, Egypt
pain score with FLACC
(Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, and Consolability scale to assess pain in young children. Each category is scored on a 0-2 scale which results in a total score between 0 (lowest pain) and 10 (worst pain).
Time frame: 30 minutes postoperative, 1 hour postoperative, 2 hour postoperative, and 6 hours postoperative
The duration of the block
from immediately after the block administration until the first postoperative rescue analgesia.
Time frame: immediately after the intervention, up to 24 hours postoperative
the Time to first postoperative rescue analgesia
it will be administered if the FLACC score is ≥ 4/10.
Time frame: 24 hours postoperative
Total rescue analgesia consumption
total dose of Morphine administrated as rescue opioid
Time frame: 24 hours postoperative
The incidence of postoperative adverse effects
including nausea , vomiting , localized hematoma, bradycardia, hypo-tension, and Pruritis.
Time frame: 24 hours postoperative
Parents satisfaction score
using a 5- point Likert score (0 = very dissatisfied, 1=dissatisfied, 2 = neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, 3 = satisfied and 4 = very satisfied)
Time frame: 24 hours postoperative
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