Laparoscopy is one of the procedures of choice for most of the elective abdominal surgeries performed preferably under endotracheal general anesthesia. With the technical advances that have been made, laparoscopic cholecystectomy is considered a procedure with a good safety profile that offers advantages over open cholecystectomy.
Laparoscopy is one of the procedures of choice for most of the elective abdominal surgeries performed preferably under endotracheal general anesthesia. With the technical advances that have been made, laparoscopic cholecystectomy is considered a procedure with a good safety profile that offers advantages over open cholecystectomy. In past general anesthesia is considered the only choice of anesthesia for laparoscopy, but nowadays regional anesthesia in the form of spinal anesthesia, epidural anesthesia and or combined spinal epidural provide beneficial advantages over general anesthesia. The most limiting factor for use of spinal anesthesia in laparoscopy is patient's discomfort with pneumo-peritoneum and the associated shoulder tip pain. Spinal anesthesia is the most popular technique for lower abdominal surgeries as it is very economical and easy to administer. Various adjuvants have been added to intra-thecal local anesthetic agents. as Intrathecal α2 agonists when used as adjuncts potentiate the effect of local anesthetics and allows a decrease in required doses of local anesthetics. Clonidine is a partial α2 agonist used intrathecally with well-established efficacy and safety. It prolongs the duration of motor and sensory spinal blockade when used along with local anesthetics. . Dexmedetomidine is new highly selective α2 adrenoceptor agonist and has been approved by Food and Drug Administration as intravenous (IV) sedative and co-analgesic drug. Its α2/α1 selectivity is 8 times higher than clonidine. many studies have been conducted the effect of intrathecal dexmedetomidine when combined with levobupivacaine in spinal anesthesia. However, not much literature is available regarding the use of intrathecal dexmedetomitine with levobupivacaine to reduce shoulder tip pain in laparoscopic cholecystectomies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
to compare the clinical intraoperative effects of intrathecal administration of fentanyl in comparison with dexmedetomidine on shoulder tip pain in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Sohag University Hospital
Sohag, Egypt
Effect of pneumoperitonum to shoulder pain
Assessment of Intraoperative complaints of shoulder tip pain after carbon dioxide insufflation, using four grades \[0, no pain; 1, mild pain but no need for analgesic; 2, moderate pain and need for analgesic; 3, severe pain and no response to analgesics (need for conversion to general anesthesia)\]. And the severity will be observed using the 10 visual analogue scale where 0 meant no pain and 10 meant worst pain experience.
Time frame: from 0 hours to 6 hours after the procedure
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