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The current study investigates the efficacy and safety of ketamine and neostigmine as adjuvants in transversus abdominis plane blocks for Cesarean sections. The study participants arerandomized into two groups, each receiving either ketamine or neostigmine alongside plain bupivacaine. Various parameters, including pain intensity, intraoperative and postoperative hemodynamics, rescue analgesia requirements, patient satisfaction, and postoperative complications, are evaluated and compared between the two groups.
Full description
A prospective, experimental double-blind control study will be conducted in Alexandria Main University Hospital after approval of the medical ethics committee of the Alexandria Faculty of Medicine and a written formal consent will be signed out from patients or their relatives. Patients will be double-blinded randomized into two equal groups (40 patients each) after receiving spinal anesthesia with 12.5 mg of 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine:
Preoperative assessment and preparation:
Patient preparation:
The patients receive:
The TAP block will be performed using Sonosite M-turbo ultrasound with high-frequency (10-15 MHz) linear transducer. The skin will be disinfected with antiseptic solution. A linear transducer will be placed in the axial plane on the midaxillary line between the subcostal margin and the iliac crest. The three layers of abdominal wall muscles will be visualized: external and internal oblique as well as the transversus abdominis muscles. The target is the fascial plane between the internal oblique and the transversus abdominis muscles. The needle will be inserted in the anterior axillary line, and the needle tip will be advanced until it reaches the fascial plane then 20 ml of 0.25% plain bupivacaine and 0.5 mg/kg ketamine will be injected in the first group and 50 microgram neostigmine in the second group under repeated aspiration for every 5 milliliters separating the plane between the internal oblique and transversus abdominis muscles with increased radiotranslucency approximately in the midaxillary line. The identical technique will be repeated on the opposite side.
Over the next 24 hours, all patients received 1 g of paracetamol IV every 8 hour as a part of multimodal analgesia. Measurements
The following parameters will be measured in every patient in the study:
Vital signs Including heart rate (bpm), and mean arterial blood pressure (mmHg). All previous parameters will be continuously monitored and recorded before starting the surgery, intraoperatively and postoperatively after giving TAP block with adjuvants, at 2, 4, 6, 12, 18, and 24 hours postoperative.
Pain scoring The visual analog scale (VAS) will be recorded intraoperatively and at 2 hr., 4 hr., 6 hr., 12 hr., 18hr., and 24 hr. postoperatively. The rescue analgesia (nalbuphine 6 mg IV) will be used when VAS score ≥ 4.
Duration of analgesia (hours) Duration of analgesia defined as the time interval after start of the technique till the first need of rescue analgesic (nalbuphine 6 mg IV).
Total dose of rescue analgesia (mg) Cumulative use of opioid (nalbuphine) in 24 hours.
Patient satisfaction Patient satisfaction with the pain control will be assessed on a four-point scale as: Excellent, Good, Fair and Poor.
Complications Any post-operative complication occurred at any time in the 24 hours of the study will be recorded and analyzed accordingly:
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80 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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