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Minimally invasive cardiac surgery is performed through a right thoracotomy, the pain management of this surgery is of great importance. Regional techniques such as thoracic epidural anesthesia or paravertebral block are excellent techniques for the management of postoperative pain in thoracic surgery but they have disadvantages that make it difficult to use in this surgery. On the one hand, anticoagulation in these patients increases the risk of complications related to the use of neuraxial techniques and, on the other hand, the technical difficulty of paravertebral block.
The erector of the spine block is a technically simple block and with a low risk of associated complications.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and benefits in the relationship of postoperative pain management in patients undergoing minimally invasive cardiac surgery when using continuous unilateral blockade of the erector in a small cohort of patients.
Full description
An observational study of a series of 20 cases will be carried out based on the casuistry of minimally invasive cardiac surgery of the investigator's center. The performance of analgesic blockade called ESP with catheter placement for continuous analgesia, at the level of the 6th thoracic vertebra in adult patients, ASA physical status I-III, which will undergo minimally invasive cardiac surgery, will be part of the multimodal analgesia strategy.
After compliance with the inclusion criteria, with the acceptance and signature of the informed consent by the participating patients, the following procedure will be followed:
These results will be included, anonymously, in an Excel database made for this purpose for further analysis. The variables will be recorded in a single intervention
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Xavier Sala-Blanch, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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