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During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a drastic increase in surgical wait times across Canada, notably for patients awaiting total knee and hip arthroplasty. Currently the average wait time for total hip arthroplasty (THA) in Alberta is 16 weeks with the 90th percentile of wait times being 47 weeks. The average wait for total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in Alberta is 20 weeks with the 90th percentile of wait times being 60 weeks. As the waitlist for these surgeries grows and with limited resources to increase the number of surgeries being performed, there is a critical need for strategies to manage the pain experienced by patients during these long waiting periods.
Many patients awaiting surgery are placed onto long-term opioid therapy to manage their pain. There are, however, significant risks associated with the extended use of opioids for pain management, such as addiction, opioid abuse, increased risk of overdose, increased risk of fractures, and increased risk of adverse cardiac events. Recognizing these risks, different strategies need to be employed to attempt to minimize the opioid burden faced by those waiting for surgery. One potential strategy is to utilize regional anesthesia for analgesia rather than relying on opioids. Regional anesthesia with nerve blocks using local anesthetic has been used in the management of preoperative pain for patients awaiting surgery for hip fracture and has been shown to be effective in reducing pain, opioid use, and the risk of serious adverse effects. However, for patients with hip fractures, their surgery usually occurs within 36 hours due to significant risks which occur beyond that timeframe. For patients waiting for THA and TKA, the surgical wait time could be weeks to months. Providing daily nerve blocks or even weekly catheters for an individual waiting up to a year for surgery is not sustainable and carries significant risks with repeated injections. New regional anesthesia techniques lasting a longer period of time are needed.
One promising intervention is to utilize cryoneurolysis. Cryoneurolysis involves treating targeted nerves using extremely low temperatures. This disrupts nerve conduction and pain impulses. Importantly, connective tissue components of the nerve are left intact allowing for regeneration over time. Because of this, cryoneurolysis is a well-established treatment for chronic and acute pain due to its effectiveness and low risk safety profile. While cryoneurolysis is well-established in its use treating chronic and surgical pain, one limitation is that it is focused primarily on postoperative pain. Our study intends to primarily evaluate the efficacy of cryoneurolysis as a preoperative pain management intervention. Establishing the use of cryoneurolysis for preoperative pain will provide a valuable resource for reducing the pain patients experience while awaiting surgery, leading to decreased opioid use and improved overall well-being. The investigators will be recruiting 30 participants total (15 having TKA and 15 having THA) that will be given cryoneurolysis while waiting for their surgery.
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Ryan Endersby, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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