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CAUDAL BUPIVACAINE VERSUS INTRAVENOUS MORPHINE ON TIME TO FIRST ANALGESIC REQUIREMENT (CaBuMorph)

M

Makerere University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Post Operative Pain

Treatments

Drug: intravenous morphine
Drug: caudal bupivacaine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02456142
206005358

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pain is a subjective sensation which in children can only be experienced and most times not expressed. Pain management in children thus falls short of their adult counterparts. Acute pain of surgery causes significant suffering and stress. In children, pain management has lagged behind because of the belief that children's pain receptors are less well developed than their adult counterparts. However this has been proven to be false as development of pain receptors has been shown by 26th week of gestation. Caudal analgesia with plain bupivacaine has been used for effective post operative analgesia. Resources sometimes limit acquisition of additives to bupivacaine to be delivered into the intrathecal space.

The fear of pharmacological adverse effects of opioids has restricted their use especially among the anesthesia officers who deliver the bulk of anesthesia services in Uganda and this has led to poor pain management in pediatric populations Mulago national referral hospital is a resource limited centre with regards to human resource, equipment and drugs. This is mainly due to lack of sufficient funds and large volume of patients with the nursing staff being overwhelmed by the patient capacity. Drug administration is often not done on time and continuous assessment of pain scores in children is not adequate resulting in poor post operative pain management. Pain control thus will depend on analgesia provided at the time of operation creating a need for prolonged pain control measures.

Studies done have compared intravenous morphine administration versus caudal analgesia and are mostly focused of sub umbilical surgery however none has been done in our setting. Bupivacaine and morphine are now more readily available and can be used for post operative analgesia. However studies on the timing to the next analgesic requirement have not been compared/done in Mulago national referral hospital.

Full description

Patients will be wheeled into the operating theatre.

  • Anaesthesia will be induced using an inhalation anaesthetic (sevoflurane) and intravenous anaesthetic using propofol or thiopental for the older children (3 years and above).
  • Maintenance of anaesthesia will be done using either inhalation anaesthetic (sevoflurane)
  • Intra-operative analgesia will be maintained with intravenous fentanyl given at the start of surgery and hourly for surgeries longer than one hour.
  • Monitoring intra and post operatively will be done with WHO standard monitoring. (Blood pressure, heart rate, saturation, temperature, ECG, End tidal carbon dioxide).
  • The intervention will be given at the end of surgery after the last stitch has been placed with patient receiving either caudal bupivacaine or intravenous morphine.
  • to receive a caudal the baby will be placed in the left lateral position knees and hips flexed
  • The skin over the coccyx and sacrum will be cleansed with povidone-iodine solution and alcohol.
  • After palpation of the sacral cornua, a 22- or 23-gauge needle will be placed into the sacral hiatus to identify the epidural space by loss of resistance as the needle passes through the sacral ligament.
  • Aspiration will be done to check for cerebrospinal fluid or blood, then a test dose is administered to rule out intravenous injection then the drug caudal bupivacaine will be injected.
  • The patients' pain scores will be assessed by the research assistant in the post anaesthesia care unit after 30 minutes before being discharged to their parent wards and hourly after the intervention is given.
  • monitoring of pulse rate and saturation on the ward will be done with a pulse oximeter.
  • On the ward the pain scores will be assessed every hour by the research assistant and time to a pain score of 4 recorded
  • The pain scores and the time to the next analgesic requirement will be recorded and continuation of analgesia given with intravenous paracetamol.

The crying, requires oxygen, increased vital signs, expression, sleeplessness (CRIES) pain tool will be used to score pain in neonates and the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry and Consolability (FLACC) pain score used in children above 2 months. Analgesic requirement will be given if child found to be in pain.

Enrollment

70 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 8 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All American Society of Anesthesia (ASA )I and II patients aged less than 8years undergoing elective abdominal perineal and lower limb orthopedic surgery

Exclusion criteria

  • Known hypersensitivity to opioids Known hypersensitivity to local anesthetics

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 2 patient groups

caudal bupivacaine
Experimental group
Description:
1ml/kg of 0.125% caudal bupivacaine given over 2 minutes will be given at the end of surgery
Treatment:
Drug: caudal bupivacaine
intravenous morphine
Active Comparator group
Description:
0.05mg/kg intravenous morphine given over 5 minutes
Treatment:
Drug: intravenous morphine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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