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Bupivacaine Digital Blocks: How Long is the Pain Relief and Temperature Elevation?

L

Lalonde, Donald H., M.D.

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pain

Treatments

Drug: Bupivacaine 0.5% + Epinephrine (1:200,000)
Drug: Bupivacaine 0.5%

Study type

Interventional

Identifiers

NCT01698593
RS#2009-1356

Details and patient eligibility

About

No one knows how long bupivacaine finger blocks last. Many use bupivacaine with and without epinephrine, but no one knows how the epinephrine affects the duration of the block. We also don't know how long the pain part of the block lasts, which is what counts.

The goal of the study is to determine the duration of action of bupivacaine digital nerve blocks (with and without epinephrine) on finger temperature and the sensory modalities of pain, touch, and pressure. 2 ml of bupivacaine 0.5% with and without epinephrine will be injected at the base of each ring finger on the palm surface. At the end of 1 hr, 6 hrs, 12 hrs, 14 hrs and each additional hour, patients will use an insulin lancet to measure pain, the Semmes Weinstein monofilament test to measure light touch and pressure and a body surface thermometer to measure finger temperature. The time for the finger to return to normal sensation and temperature will be measured.

Full description

Lidocaine finger blocks have been shown to provide analgesia for nearly 5 hours without epinephrine and approximately 10 hours with epinephrine - essentially doubling its duration.1,2 The analgesic effect of epinephrine on the duration of bupivacaine finger blocks remains unknown.

Bupivacaine finger injection provides a much longer duration of action than lidocaine. Previous studies have shown the duration of action to be as long as 24.9 hours.1 In the senior author's experience, however, patients who get bupivacaine blocks start asking for pain medication as early as 7 hours after the block. Is it possible that the pain blocking effect of bupivacaine has a different duration than the touch and pressure effects? The answer to this question also remains unknown.

The third unknown question about bupivacaine digital blocks is their effect on fingertip temperature. It has been shown that lidocaine wrist blocks increase temperature in finger tips, and this has been postulated to be potentially helpful in frostbite to provide pain relief and hyperemia.3 Previous studies have shown bupivacaine to exhibit vasodilatory properties at clinical concentrations of injection.4-7 Does bupivacaine provide increased warmth to the finger tip? How long does it last?

The goals of this study are three fold: 1.) To determine what effect epinephrine has on the duration of bupivacaine finger block anesthesia. 2.) To assess the duration of action of bupivacaine with and without epinephrine on the digital sensory modalities of pain, touch and pressure, and 3.) To assess the finger tip temperature changes that result from bupivacaine digital blocks with and without epinephrine.

Enrollment

44 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy adult volunteer

Exclusion criteria

  • Under the age of majority
  • Unable to give consent
  • Pregnancy
  • Diabetes
  • Allergy to local anesthetic
  • Prior finger surgery
  • Preexisting digital vascular ischemia

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

44 participants in 1 patient group

Ring Finger Nerve Block
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: Bupivacaine 0.5%
Drug: Bupivacaine 0.5% + Epinephrine (1:200,000)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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