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Does the Measurement of Pupillary Reactivity by an Automated Pupillometer Determine the Effectiveness of Local Anesthesia Under General Anesthesia? (ALGISCAN)

C

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes

Status

Completed

Conditions

Knee Surgery
Arthroplasty

Treatments

Device: AlgiScan

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01685645
LOCAL/2012/JKJR-01
2012-A01095-38 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The pupillary pain-meter AlgiScan ® with integrated nociceptive stimulator is a portable, battery-operated device which automatically measures, by means of an infrared camera, pupil diameter. This is measured in response to noxious stimulation produced by a tetanus at a frequency of 100 Hz for 5 seconds. Its intensity varies from 10 to 60 mA. The recording is performed for a period of 13 seconds (3 seconds prior to stimulation, stimulation for 5 seconds, 5 seconds after the stimulation). An interval of 3 minutes is allowed between the two measurements (right and left), which is significantly higher than the time necessary to return to normal (about 20seconds).

The pupillary pain index (PPI) ranges from 0 to 10 and is a composite measure of the pupillary diameter reflex to the tetanus stimuli delivered by the AlgiScan device. Smaller scores indicate increased analgesia.

The main objective of this study is to determine whether PPI index variation can determine a prognostic threshold of analgesic efficacy of unilateral lower limb sensory nerve block before incision. The measurements are performed after bilateral nociceptive stimulation (blocked side versus non-blocked side) in patients under general anesthesia for major knee surgery.

Full description

The secondary objectives of this study are to find a link between the clinical criteria for block failure and the ratio of the blocked side PPI over the unblocked side PPI:

  • study the potential link between algic thermal sensitivity (tested prior to general anesthesia) and the blocked side PPI (or the asymmetry of the index between the blocked side and the unblocked side).
  • study the potential link between postoperative morphine consumption and the blocked side PPI index (or the asymmetry of the index between the blocked side and the unblocked side).
  • study the potential link between consumption of remifentanil during surgery and the blocked side PPI index (or the asymmetry of the index between the blocked side and the unblocked side).
  • study the potential link between the hemodynamic response to incision and the blocked side PPI index (or the asymmetry of the index between the blocked side and the unblocked side).
  • study the potential link between morning pain assessment and the blocked side PPI index (or the asymmetry of the index between the blocked side and the unblocked side).

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The patient must have given his/her informed and signed consent
  • The patient must be insured or beneficiary of a health insurance plan
  • The patient is scheduled for a major knee surgery (arthroplasty,) under general anesthesia with remifentanil combined with regional anesthesia (femoral nerve block with a sciatic block)
  • The patient has an ASA score of I, II or III
  • For women of childbearing age: the patient is under effective contraception

Exclusion criteria

  • The patient is participating in another study
  • The patient is in an exclusion period determined by a previous study
  • The patient is under judicial protection, under tutorship or curatorship
  • The patient refuses to sign the consent
  • It is impossible to correctly inform the patient
  • The patient is pregnant, parturient, or breastfeeding
  • The patient has a known allergy to amino-amide local anesthetics
  • The patient has a contra-indication for local anesthesia (impaired hemostasis, local infection)
  • It is technically impossible to perform the truncal block
  • The patient has a condition accompanied by autonomic dysfunction altering the pupillary dilation reflex : diabetes mellitus type 1; insulin dependent diabetes mellitus type 2 with retinopathy, multiple sclerosis, systemic amyloidosis, uncontrolled systemic hypertension, clinical peripheral neuropathy
  • Patients with chronic pain, with long-term opioid treatment
  • The patient is undergoing treatment that may alter the pupillary dilation reflex: antiemetic (droperidol, metoclopramide), alpha 2 agonist (clonidine)
  • The patient has a high risk of postoperative nausea and vomiting (APFEL score> 3)
  • The patient has a pacemaker or defibrillator
  • The patient has a history of addiction or severe psychiatric illness

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

100 participants in 1 patient group

Study population
Experimental group
Description:
The study population consists of male and female patients admitted for programmed major knee surgery (arthroplasty) with a truncal analgesic block (femoral nerve block with a sciatic block) and operated under general anesthesia. See inclusion and exclusion criteria. Intervention: AlgiScan
Treatment:
Device: AlgiScan

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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