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Non-interventional Study Evaluating the Management of Pain Using a Technique Developed and Commonly Used by the Center, in Patients Who Underwent Arthroscopic Surgery of the Shoulder in the Outpatient Setting. (BSS-CHIR)

U

University of Limoges (UL)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Shoulder Pain

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04189731
87RI19_0031 (BSS-CHIR)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Shoulder surgery is performed usually under interscalene block considered as a gold standard. This anesthesia is well suited for hospitalized patients but not for outpatients. The Orthopedic Surgery Department of Clinique Chénieux has been operating patients requiring arthroscopic shoulder surgery with a short interscalene block relayed by a long suprascapular block. The main objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of this method by measuring the average pain over 3 days after the operation.

Full description

The surgery of the shoulder is usually performed under interscalene block (ISB), considered as a gold standard. This anesthesia is well suited for hospitalized patients but not for outpatients. Indeed, the ISB entails, in addition to a sensory block, a motor block often useless and important since it extends beyond the shoulder to the entire upper limb. It can also be a source of anxiety and cause the risk of compression in the limb operated because of the extended sensorimotor block. It is also responsible for a painful bounce almost constant with sometimes the very rapid installation of intense pain when the effect of the sensory block disappears. This pain can be difficult to relieve despite frequent use of opioids.

The Orthopedic and Traumatologic Surgery Department of the Clinique Chénieux has been operating patients requiring arthroscopic surgery of the shoulder according to the following technique. It involves the establishment of a short ISB (between 2h and 4h) relayed by a supra-scapular block (SSB) long (72h) through the placement of a perineural catheter thus allowing a continuous diffusion of Naropein® by an elastomeric pump. The same day or the day after the operation, the patients return to their home and are followed by nurses.

The objective of this technique is to better manage postoperative pain, thus allowing the management of patients in outpatient surgery. A prospective non-interventional study will make it possible, in a context of common practice, to obtain data on the management of pain in operated patients and then to consider a generalization of this practice to other centers.

Enrollment

95 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Men, women between 18 and 70 years
  • Patient in need of acromioplasty or rotator cuff surgery (ruptured cuff or calcification of the cuff) or reinsertion of the glenoid bead (Bankart intervention)
  • Patient with an American Society of Anesthesiologists score (ASA) of 1 or 2

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient needing shoulder surgery for other indications and open surgery
  • Patient with cognitive impairment or dementia symptoms
  • Patient with a BMI ≥ 35 without systemic morbidity requiring hospitalization
  • Contraindication to the drugs used in the study (hypersensitivity to ropivacaine or other amide-bonded local anesthetics)
  • Pregnant or lactating patient
  • Patient with severe hepatic impairment
  • Class III antiarrhythmic patient

Trial design

95 participants in 1 patient group

supra-scapular block
Description:
Patient will have a short ISB (between 2h and 4h) relayed by a supra-scapular block (SSB) long (72h) through the placement of a perineural catheter thus allowing a continuous diffusion of Naropein® by an elastomeric pump

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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