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Pain is one of the medical problems frequently misdiagnosed, undertreated, and poorly under-stood, particularly in children.Poor pain management during childhood may have long-term deleterious impacts, including damaging neuro-endocrine reactions, disturbed eating and sleeping pat-terns, and increased pain sensitivity during subsequent painful events.
A caudal epidural block is a common regional analgesic technique in pediatric surgery . It is a time-tested, safe, and efficacious technique However, the duration of post-operative pain seen with much pediatric surgery (>24 h) outlasts the duration of analgesia afforded by a standard 'local-anesthetics only' caudal block (4-12 h) While continuous catheters prolong analgesic duration, such techniques are more cumbersome, require significant technical expertise and may be associated with higher adverse events. Contrary to this, adding adjuvants to local anesthetic is an appealing alternative. Adjuvants can improve the block and analgesic duration , reduce general anesthetic or local anesthetic requirements, allow for smoother emergence, lower incidence of emergence delirium, and facilitate early discharge in ambulatory surgery.
Various adjuvants have been shown to enhance caudal blocks with varying degrees of success. A multitude of clinical trials and meta-analyses have analyzed the efficacy of different adjuvants such as alpha-2 agonists (clonidine and dexmedetomidine ), N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists (ketamine and magnesium ), opioids (fentanyl, morphine, and tramadol ), corticosteroids (dexamethasone ), and acetylcholine esterase inhibitors (neostigmine).
Dexmedetomidine has become more popular as a caudal adjuvant in children; it is a highly selective α2 agonist with sedative and analgesic properties. Dexmedetomidine possesses anxiolytic, sedative, sympatholytic, and analgesic properties without respiratory depressant effects In addition; dexmedetomidine has the ability to reduce both the anesthetic and opioid analgesic requirements during the perioperative period.
Full description
Anesthetic technique All children will be fasted for at least six hours before surgery, with clear fluids allowed until two hours before induction. Heart rate, non-invasive blood pressure, and oxygen saturation will be monitored in the operating room. The anesthetic regimen will be standardized. All participants will be pre-oxygenated with 100% oxygen for 3 min via a facemask.
Both groups will receive 0.5 mg/kg of midazolam orally as a premedication half an hour before induction. Anesthesia induction will be achieved by incremental 1.5% doses of sevoflurane up to 7% in a 50% oxygen/air mixture. After establishment of intravenous line, intravenous fentanyl (1μg/kg) and propofol (2mg/kg) will be given. After induction 0.5 mg/kg atracurium will be given to facilitate endotracheal intubation; an endotracheal tube of appropriate size will be inserted; and controlled ventilation will be adjusted to maintain end arterial CO2 around 35 mmHg. Anesthesia will be maintained with sevoflurane 2% in a 50% oxygen/air mixture.
Caudal block After anesthesia is administered and the patient is stabilized, he will be placed in the left lateral decubitus position, the sacrococcygeal area will be sterilized with povidone-iodine solution, and sterile wraps will be applied. A 22-gauge hypodermic needle will be used to locate the caudal epidural area. After aspiration without blood or CSF and confirmation of the caudal epidural space using the modified Swoosh test, the medication mixture will be administered.
Adequate analgesia during surgery will be defined by hemodynamic stability according to the absence of greater than 20% increases in heart rate or systolic blood pressure from baseline values obtained immediately before the first surgical incision. Patients with unsuccessful blocks will be excluded from the study.
At the end of the operation, neostigmine 50 mcg/kg and atropine 15 mcg/kg will be used to reverse the action of the muscle relaxant, and sevoflurane will be discontinued. All patients will be extubated and transported to the post-anaesthesia care unit. Participants will be discharged from the PACU to a ward once the modified Aldrete score is nine or greater.
The same surgeon will perform all procedures. Agitation state will be assessed using RASS score. (Table 1)
Table (1): RASS Score Scale Label Description (+4) Combative Combative, violent, immediate danger to staff (+3) Very agitated Pulls to remove tubes or catheters; aggressive (+2) Agitated Frequent non-purposeful movement, fights ventilator (+1) Restless Anxious, apprehensive, movements not aggressive (0) Alert and Calm Spontaneously pays attention to caregiver (-1) Drowsy Not fully alert, but has sustained awakening to voice (eye opening & contact >10 sec) (-2) Light sedation Briefly awakens to voice (eyes open & contact <10 sec) (-3) Moderate sedation Movement or eye opening to voice (no eye contact) (-4) Deep sedation No response to voice, but movement or eye opening to physical stimulation (-5) Unarousable No response to voice or physical stimulation
The emergence time will be defined as the time from the end of surgery to eye opening on calling the children's name. Postoperatively, Quality of recovery, hemodynamics, pain score and agitation state will be assessed.
Postoperative pain will be assessed by an experienced nurse who is unaware of the patient's allocation using FLACC score every 2 h for 24 h.
How to Use the FLACC score:
FLACC scale *Face: 0:No distinct facial expression or smile.
1:Intermittently showing grimaces or frowns or showing withdrawal or indifference.
2:Frequently or constantly quivering their chin or clenching their jaws.
Leg:
0:Normal or relaxed state.
1:Showing signs of agitation, restlessness or tension. 2:Kicking or drawing their legs up.
Activity:
0:Quietly lying in a normal position and moves effortlessly.
Cry:
0:Not crying.
1:Moaning, whimpering or complaining from time to time 2:Constantly crying, screaming, sobbing or complaining.
Consolability:
0:Relaxed and at ease.
Can be distracted by touching and hugging or with conversation.
Hard to condole or comfort.
-Interpreting the FLACC Score: 0 = Relaxed and Comfortable 1-3 = Mild discomfort 4-6 = Moderate pain 7-10= Severe pain or discomfort or both The duration of analgesic action will be taken as the time from caudal analgesia to first administration of supplementary analgesia.
When pain score reaches more than 3, rescue analgesia i.e. in the form of paracetamol suppository 10 mg/kg will be administered. In case of failure of to control pain with paracetamol, we will give IV nalbuphine 0.01 mg/kg.
Adverse effects from caudal anesthesia such as pruritus, flushing, vomiting, respiratory depression, and urine retention will be checked for and documented
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Guardians refusal
Contraindication to caudal block like :
Patients with cardiopulmonary disease
Patients with other congenital anomalies
Patients with developmental delay
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
ahmed gamal mahmoud
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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