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We plan to demonstrate the superiority of epidural anaesthesia/analgesia in repairs of large ventral hernias as compared with a conventional narcotic analgesia regimen.
We hypothesize that:
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Epidural anesthesia and analgesia has shown benefits over standard anesthesia/analgesia in many types of Vascular, GI, and Thoracic surgeries. The benefits extended are varied, and include: improvements in cardiac and pulmonary function, decreases in hypercoagulability, reduction of post-operative ileus and decreases in post-operative pain. 1 Epidural pain relief works by exposing the epidural space, with its network of nerve roots, to a flood of analgesics and/or local anesthetic. This is thought to prevent the release of neurotransmitters from afferent pain fibers or interrupt the transmission of pain related information to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. 2 Several studies have been done on patients undergoing GI surgery with adjunct epidurals (particularly colorectal procedures) and they have shown that ileus and length of stay, is greatly reduced. 3No one has yet extended these benefits to patients undergoing hernia repair.
Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair has recently become a popular choice for both patients and surgeons alike, and has been shown in some studies to reduce wound complications and length of hospital stay. But improvements in post-operative pain, ileus and return to work have been less than hoped for, and as such, adjuncts are being investigated to improve some of these outcomes. In one study of 850 patients in 4 different academic institutions patients had a mean hospital stay of 2.3 days (although a great portion of cases were small ventral hernias that resulted in same-day discharges) and 3% remained hospitalized with a prolonged ileus. The proportion of patients who had prolonged ileus and subsequently longer hospital stays was much greater amongst the patients with larger ventral hernia repairs as well as the patients with recurrences.4 Moreover there has been some suggestion by Ramshaw and colleagues that Laparoscopic Ventral hernia repair is more painful than the classical open hernia operation. 5 One of the explanations is that there may be a component of parietal as well as visceral pain to this procedure; with the visceral pain accompanying the counter-traction on the herniated contents of the sac when taking down adhesions, and the parietal pain from the many full thickness sutures and 3mm tacks used to secure the prosthesis into the abdominal wall.6 In this study, we will test the benefits of epidural anesthesia/analgesia on these patients with complicated Laparoscopic ventral hernia repairs.
As of yet there have been no studies that compare the use of epidural analgesia/anesthesia to conventional anesthesia and narcotics for these patients in relation to their expected length of stay, post-op pain, ileus, or other complications.
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Inclusion criteria
18-80 years of age
ASA grades I-III
Patients with large hernias
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