Although abdominal wall surgeries are also as routinely performed on pediatric patients, postoperative pain in children has remained under-researched compared to adults. Consequently, there has been a growing need for adapting regional analgesia to this distinct population. While the Transversus Abdominis Plane Block (TAPB) and Quadratus Lumborum Block (QLB) have been established as potent sensory blocks in adult practice, data on their efficiency in pediatric abdominal parietal surgeries remain scarce. The investigators aimed to compare the analgesic effect of lateral TAPB versus posterior QLB in children undergoing elective abdominal wall surgery.
Randomized controlled trial, including pediatric patients aged from 1 to 10 years old scheduled for an elective outpatient open sub-umbilical abdominal wall surgery. After a standardized anesthesia induction protocol, patients were randomized into two parallel groups receiving either a lateral TAPB or a posterior QLB. The investigators determined the time to first rescue analgesia as the primary outcome of the present trial. As for secondary outcomes, the investigators set out to comparatively assess block failure rates, intra operative hemodynamic features pain scores consisting of FLACC scale values, analgesic consumption attested by the number of administrated rescue paracetamol doses along the cumulative administered dose per kilogram of weight within the first postoperative 24 hours, as well as the incidence of side effects namely systemic local anesthetic toxicity symptoms, PONV, urinary retention, ICU admission or re-intervention for block-related complications.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
90
The operator applied a linear ultrasound probe transversally to the mid-axillary line between the costal margin and iliac crest. Landmarks were then identified as three muscles layers beneath the subcutaneous tissue; from external to internal lay respectively the external oblique muscle (EO), the internal oblique muscle (IO) and the transversus abdominis (TA). The needle was inserted in plane from the iliac crest level on the midaxillary line advancing towards the midline to the fascia laying between the IO and the TA muscles until pop detection. A clear aspiration ruled out vascular effraction. Finally, the space between the two muscle planes was hydrodissected with the bupivacaine.The end goal was visualizing the IO moving upward leaving room to a hypoechoic lens-shaped local anesthetic distribution.
The patient was laid in a lateral decubitus position. The operator applied the probe transversally on the iliac crest directing the indicator to display the back muscles encompassed by the thoracolumbar fascia (TLF).The intended image was spotted by the emergence of the transverse process L4, delimiting the stem of a shamrock-like shape. Quadratus lumborum (QL) muscle represented the upper leaf of the shamrock, and psoas major (PM) and erector spinae (ES) stood respectively for the anterior and posterior leaves. The needle was inserted in plane from the postero-median lumbar wall directed antero-laterally with tip aiming at the posterior border of the QL muscle adjacent to the ES muscles. Pop detection indicated the middle TLF where the local anesthetic would spread, homogenous and resistance-free
Bechir Hamza Children's Hospital
Tunis, Tunisia
Time to first rescue analgesia
Time (in minutes) from the completion of the block to first analgesia administration based on postoperative pain score (assessed using FLACC (Face Legs Activity Crying Consolability) in ward \>3)
Time frame: 3 hours
block Failure rate
percentage of failed blocks in both groups
Time frame: 30 minutes
FLACC scale pain scores
Post operative analgesia was assessed using the following measures: \- pain scores including the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, and Consolability (FLACC) scale, recorded at H0, H1, H2
Time frame: 2 hours
PPMP scale scores
Parents' Postoperative Pain Measure scores after discharge (at H6, H12, and H24 post operative).
Time frame: 24 hours
Total analgesic consumption
determined by the total number of rescue paracetamol doses administered (mg per kilogram of weight)
Time frame: 24 hours
Post operative nausea and vomiting (PONV)
incidence (percentage) of post operative nausea and vomiting in both groups
Time frame: 24 hours
Urinary retention
incidence (percentage) of post operative Urinary retention in both groups
Time frame: 24 hours
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