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Total knee arthroplasty (knee replacement) is a common orthopedic procedure for osteoarthritis. This procedure is performed either under general anesthesia or spinal anesthesia; after the procedure in the recovery room, these patients undergo adductor canal block, which is a nerve block to provide 8-14 hours of postoperative pain control. For this nerve block, 15-20 ml of local anesthetic is combined with adjuvant medications to improve the quality of pain control as well as the duration of pain relief. The primary local anesthetic used for adductor canal block is ropivacaine, and the commonly used adjuvants are epinephrine and dexamethasone.
There is conflicting data available in the literature regarding efficacy of addition of clonidine to the local anesthetic injection in peripheral nerve blocks, and there is no data assessing the efficacy of this medication in adductor canal blocks.
Once the consent process is completed, patients are enrolled in two arms. Upon conclusion of surgery, a sealed and coded envelope with either clonidine or the placebo syringe will be given to the acute pain service staff performing the nerve block. This will be mixed with local anesthetic solution and injected in the adductor canal under ultrasound guidance.
The primary outcome measure will be the duration of analgesia, which will be assessed as the time interval between placement of adductor canal block to the first request of opioid analgesic by patients (which will be obtained from hospital electronic medical records). Secondary outcomes will include:
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80 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Borzoo Farhang, DO
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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