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The goal of this observational study is to compare the regional anesthetic methods (not including general anesthesia) -spinal anesthesia, erector spinae plane (ESP) block- which are in routine practice in critically ill adult patients operated for femur fracture, in terms of intraoperative and postoperative hemodynamics and clinical course, postoperative intensive care unit stay and hospitalization durations, pain scores, postoperative morbidity, and mortality.
Participants will undergo either spinal anesthesia or erector spinae plane block.
Full description
Different anesthesia methods, including general and regional anesthesia, are used in operating rooms in daily practice. When general anesthesia is performed, the patient is rendered entirely unconscious by using intravenous and/or inhalation anesthetics, total sensory loss develops, and the patient's ventilation is provided by a mechanical ventilator. Regional anesthesia applications consist of blockage of nerve conduction by applying local anesthetics from different body parts without causing loss of consciousness. By using neuraxial anesthesia techniques - such as spinal anesthesia, epidural anesthesia, and caudal block - medulla spinalis-related neuronal blocking can be performed. Another regional anesthesia method whose use has expanded considerably in recent years is peripheral nerve blocks. This anesthesia method injects local anesthetic by targeting a specific plexus, nerve, or facia without any central nervous system blockage.
An essential part of intraoperative anesthesia management is planning analgesia for postoperative pain. It is aimed to provide analgesia with intravenous analgesics, central neuraxial blocks, or peripheral nerve blocks. Ensuring postoperative pain management has great importance in clinical practice because pain is associated with the patient's superficial breathing, prolonged immobilization, and noncompliant patients. Therefore, it is related to the development of atelectasis in the postoperative period and/or hypoxia-hypercarbia caused by inadequate gas exchange. In this situation where the patient cannot provide adequate respiration, the need for noninvasive mechanical ventilation may develop in the ward or intensive care unit where the patient is followed, closer clinical follow-up will be required, and the patient's hospitalization period will be prolonged. For this reason, it is one of the primary responsibilities to prefer anesthetic methods that help to provide optimal postoperative pain management.
Femoral fracture cases are primarily encountered in elderly patients with multiple comorbidities. Postoperative follow-up of these highly mortal fractures is often provided in intensive care units. In Turkish society, with an increasing elderly population, the long hospitalization periods of this patient group in the intensive care unit and their subsequent follow-up in the ward until they are discharged bring high healthcare costs. It has been shown in various studies in the literature that the anesthetic method is related to the length of hospitalization. Therefore, the clinical practices of anesthesiologists who frequently work with elderly patients in the operating room and intensive care are essential.
The clinician chooses the method of anesthesia, taking into account the type of operation, contraindications of the patient's clinical condition, pain management, postoperative follow-up conditions, and patient request. In critically ill patients with femoral fractures, the surgical procedure is successfully performed under general anesthesia, spinal anesthesia, or lumbar erector spinae plane (ESP) block. There are studies in which erector spinae plane (ESP) block applied from the lumbar region has been used as a primary anesthetic method that allows surgery in patients with femoral fractures.
In this study, the investigators aimed to compare the regional anesthetic methods (not including general anesthesia) -spinal anesthesia, erector spinae plane (ESP) block- which are in routine practice in critically ill adult patients operated for femur fracture in terms of intraoperative and postoperative hemodynamics and clinical course, postoperative intensive care unit stay and hospitalization durations, pain scores, postoperative morbidity, and mortality.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Özlem Ersoy Karka, Ass. Prof.; Ezgi Sönmez Camcıoğlu, Res. Ass.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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