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The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of different routes of local anaesthesia administration in laparoscopic procedures to reduce post-operative pain (intra-peritoneal infusion of Ropivacaine 0.75%, port site injection of Ropivacaine 0.75% or a combination of both techniques), through a randomized one-center double-blinded study.
Full description
Research Question What is the best route of Ropivacaine administration in laparoscopic procedures in decreasing post-operative pain? Is it port site injection, intra-peritoneal instillation of local anesthetics or is it a combination of both routes? Our hypothesis is that a combination of port site injection and intra-peritoneal instillation of local anesthetics will be more effective in lowering pain the first 24 hours after surgery.
Characteristics of the patient population Inclusion criteria
Elective gynecologic laparoscopy for benign conditions at Antwerp University Hospital.
Successful laparoscopy without surgical or anesthetic complications.
Female
18-70 years
ASA( American Society of Anesthesia) I-II Exclusion criteria
(1) Hypersensitivity to anaesthetics of the amide-type (2) Obesity, BMI > 35 (3) Patients with chronic use of analgesics / chronic pain (4) Patients with an abnormal liver function (5) Urgent surgical procedures (6) Pregnancy (this means we only include patients who use contraceptives, are sterilized, have a negative dipstick testing or a negative serum testing or patients who are postmenopausal) 4. Characteristics of the treatment We will be using ropivacaine - naropin 7,5mg/ml, a local anaesthetic of the amide type. The administered dose of this local anaesthetic will be 3mg/kg for each patient. Depending on the study group the patient belongs to, this dose will be given in full by either local injection at the trocar entry points or by intraperitoneal injection or it will be divided between both injection sites, respectively 1mg at the trocar sites and 2mg intraperitoneal. The unequal dose distribution is based on the surface area the local anaesthetic has to cover.
Anaesthetic protocol
Induction:
Maintenance:
Analgesia intraoperatively:
At the end of the successful gynaecologic laparoscopy, patients will receive the additional pain management according to their randomly assigned study group:
Suction and aspiration is avoided after instillation of local anaesthetic intra-abdominal in group A and C.
The study medication will be prepared in the operating room right before use. This means that neither the anaesthesiologist nor the surgeon, performing the surgery, are blinded. This isn't a problem since it is already at the end of the procedure and they will not be the ones following up on the patients for study purposes.
End of the procedure After surgery, the patients will be transferred to the recovery room. A standard postoperative analgesic regimen will be used in all patients with Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) >= 3.
As long as the patient is in the hospital, she will receive paracetamol 1g every 6 hours, preferably given orally. If, despite this regimen, the NRS score is higher than 3, they will receive tramadol 100mg IV + alizapride 50 mg. There will be a re-evaluation after 30 minutes. If the NRS is still higher than 3, an anaesthesiologist will be consulted and a subcutaneous dose of morphine will be given. The dose will be 5 mg if the body weight of the patient is less than 90 kg and the patient is less than 70 years old. In a patient heavier than 90 kg and younger than 70 years, the dose will be 10mg morphine subcutaneously.
The nurses of the day hospital will complete the first page(s) of the patient's questionnaire.
Later that day the patient will be discharged from the hospital if all the discharge criteria are met according to standard operating procedures.
When going home all patients receive a map with their questionnaire, a prescription for paracetamol 1g if necessary, max 4 times a day, and a last reminder to not forget about the questionnaire. In this study, we will focus about the first week postoperatively.
This method is explained in the introduction page and is the method of choice to evaluate pain in the recovery room. This means that all the patients will already be familiar with the scoring system before going home. Intra-abdominal pain will be assessed during rest and during an effort, for example coughing. In the postoperative period, the time to first analgesic administration and total analgesic requirements (paracetamol, tramadol and morphine) will be recorded.
For the other parameters, our interests lie in the presence or absence of these elements so we chose for a simple "yes" or "no" question.
The individuals filling in the questionnaires, the patients or the nurses of the recovery room will always be blinded to the study groups, as will the nurse contacting the patients for the follow up. The research nurses will contact the patients through telephone 24 h after surgery and again 1 week after surgery to get the answers of the questionnaires. They will be unaware of the study group the patient was subdivided into. The responses will be recorded and analysed by members of the research group. If the patients are not pain free after one week, we will contact them again after one month. After that, they will be called once a month until they are pain free or 6 months have passed. Postoperative pain lasting more than one week could be and indicator for the onset of chronic pain. (13) However, this topic will need additional research that, for the moment, is beyond the scope of our investigation.
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60 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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