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Effect of Superficial Cervical Plexus Block on the Postoperative Quality of Recovery (QoR)

University Health Network, Toronto logo

University Health Network, Toronto

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cervical Disc Prolapse

Treatments

Other: Superficial cervical plexus block for experimental group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01662219
12-0210-A

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pain and discomfort after anterior cervical spine surgery is difficult to quantify and quoted as moderate in severity, often needing oral opioid analgesics. In addition, these patients are more prone for postoperative respiratory complication due to airway edema secondary to surgical retraction or wound hematoma. Opioid analgesics provide good pain control but postoperative nausea and vomiting and respiratory depression are undesirable in these patients who are at risk for postoperative wound hematoma and airway edema The use of multimodal analgesia is rapidly becoming the 'standard of care' for preventing pain after ambulatory procedures at most surgery centers throughout the world . The purpose of this study is to determine whether superficial cervical plexus block will improve the postoperative quality of recovery as measured by Quality of Recovery 40 questionnaire (QoR-40) in patients undergoing elective anterior cervical discectomy and fusion.

Full description

Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion is increasingly being done as a day surgery or short stay surgery. Postoperative pain is the leading cause of unplanned hospital admissions following day surgery, a major source of dissatisfaction and often impairs the quality of recovery. Opioid analgesics alone are not always effective and may also worsen the postoperative nausea and vomiting and in turn the postoperative recovery. This study is designed to find out if an injection of freezing on the side of neck around the nerves (superficial cervical plexus block) improves the quality of recovery from anesthesia and surgery by reducing the pain, analgesic consumption after anterior cervical spine surgery.

Primary Outcome Measure The primary outcome measure is the global QoR-40 aggregate score at 24 hours after surgery.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  • Postoperative pain scores (first 24 hours)
  • Total analgesic consumption (first 24 hours)
  • Time for first opioid administration
  • Postop Nausea and vomiting (first 24 hours)
  • Post operative sedation (first 24 hours)

Enrollment

46 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • all adult patients
  • aged 18-80 years
  • with ASA class I - III
  • undergoing anterior cervical disc surgery in supine position

Exclusion criteria

  1. In patients who are allergic to local anesthetics
  2. ASA- IV patients
  3. Lack of informed consent
  4. Pregnant patient

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

46 participants in 2 patient groups

superficial cervical plexus block
Experimental group
Description:
superficial cervical plexus block for experimental group
Treatment:
Other: Superficial cervical plexus block for experimental group
No Block
No Intervention group
Description:
no superficial cervical plexus block for the no intervention group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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