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Dislocation of the femoral nerve catheters, which are used as postoperative analgesic method after knie surgery, will be studied. Two Groups will be compared; in the first group the femoral nerve catheter will be placed sonographically with the in-plane technique, whereas in the other Group the femoral nerve catheter will be placed sonographically with the out-of-plane technique
Full description
Patients scheduled for elective major knee surgery will be assessed for eligibility and after written informed consent included in this clinical trial. Prior to surgery, the patient will receive a femoral catheter with either ultrasound placed in-plane (IP) or with ultrasound placed out-of-plane (OOP) as perioperative analgesic regimen using well-established and previously published techniques. The allocation to the different groups will be according to a computerized random-list established the day prior to surgery. In all cases, continuous regional anaesthesia regimen will be started after surgery. For surgery the patient can receive spinal anaesthesia, or a general anaesthesia. The use of a sciatic block will be applied according to the clinical standards of our department. Ropivacaine 0.3% (bag with 100 ml, Sintetica SA, Mendrisio Switzerland) 20 ml for the femoral catheter insertion. In both groups 10ml of ropivacaine 0.3% will be applied over the needle and 10ml over the catheter after its placement. In both groups the catheters will be connected to the electronic pump in the recovery room and run with ropivacaine 0.3% at 6 ml/h with boli of 4ml every 20min.
First rescue medication: ropivacaine 0.3% 20ml up to 3 x day. The catheters will stay in place for 48 hours and removed only if VAS< 40 with standard analgesia.
At 24 and 48 hours after placement of the femoral catheter, a bolus of NaCl 0.9% 10ml will be applied under ultrasound control in both groups and dislocation will be noted if the local anaesthetic does not reach the femoral nerve. In that case it will be noted where the local anaesthetic is localised. Block quality will be checked by applying cold on the front of the knee and measuring the sensation to cold in a scale from 0 to 2 (before NaCl 0.9% application). Pain will be assessed before the dislocation test only for in front and medial side of the knee in a regularly used NRS scale from 0 to 10. Complications and side effects of regional anesthesia in both groups will be documented (toxicity, blood in catheter, infection).
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American Society of Anesthesiologists class I-III patients, both sexes
≥ 18 years old
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80 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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