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Pain Control After Total Knee Arthroplasty: Benefit In Adding Single Shot Adductor Canal Block to Existing Pain Regimen Protocol?

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Henry Ford Health

Status and phase

Completed
Early Phase 1

Conditions

Pain

Treatments

Procedure: Adductor Canal Block
Drug: Ropivacaine
Drug: Bupivacaine
Procedure: Periarticular Injection

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a randomized, double blinded, standard of care controlled clinical trial. All adult patients over eighteen desiring total knee arthroplasty will be eligible. The study compares pain control, opioid consumption, and physical exam findings in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty between patients receiving adductor canal block and those who receiving periarticular injection alone.

Full description

The purpose of this project is to compare the effectiveness of two different but well accepted approaches to nerve blockade in order to improve pain control after total knee arthroplasty. Specifically, this study seeks to identify the if adductor canal blockade provides additional pain relief and decreased morphine consumption when used in addition to a local infiltration of anesthetic (periarticular injection).

Aims:

  1. compare pain scores in the post operative period between the two groups.
  2. compare morphine equivalent required in the postoperative period
  3. compare patient satisfaction with pain control in the post operative period
  4. compare physical exam findings such as joint range of motion in the post operative period
  5. compare ability to participate with physical therapy in the post operative period

Total knee arthroplasty is associated with intense pain in the post operative period. Pain control is essential in this patient population. Beyond the ethical and humanitarian concerns, pain has been shown in the literature to affect outcomes after total knee replacement. Patients in pain tend to have worse range of motion, decreased participation with physical therapy, increased time to discharge, and downstream medical sequela as well. Pain has been shown to cause or exacerbate delirium in the postoperative period. Patients in pain ambulate less and stay in bed more, therefore increasing the risk of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Patients in pain consume more opioids, which have well known side effects, such as constipation, nausea, vomiting, pruritus, addiction, and altered mental status. Early joint range of motion prevents irreversible joint stiffness and pain, affecting long term outcomes. Pain control in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty has improved in recent years. The current standard has become a multimodal approach, consisting of preoperative, intraoperative and post operative interventions. The multimodal approach works by preventing or addressing pain at multiple location and targets multiple different pain receptors and pain generators. There has been much attention given to injections and nerve blocks in addition to standard pain medications such as antiinflammatories, acetaminophen, and opioids. There have been many published studies investigating various medication regimens, periarticular injection cocktails, and post operative nerve blocks. These studies have shown that each modality works better than placebo. Several studies have shown that post operative blocks provide additional benefit when used in conjunction with a periarticular injection. These studies were done with femoral nerve catheters and adductor canal catheters that stay in place for several days post operative and require subsequent boluses. No studies in the literature have studied the additional benefit of a single shot adductor canal block. The rationale is that the injection given at the time of surgery should affect the same same local nerves and pain receptors as the adductor canal block, via a different technique. Therefore, the investigators believe the adductor canal block may prove to be of no additional benefit in the investigators patients.

The ultimate goal is identifying the best pain control protocol to decrease pain in the post operative period. Developing this protocol may require the addition or subtraction of various treatment modalities. This study is looking at the adductor canal block, which if found to be unnecessary will prevent patients from receiving unnecessary procedures. If found to be effective at reducing pain, then this study will provide direct evidence for using single shot adductor canal blockade in addition to the periarticular injection.

Enrollment

128 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients over the age of 18 scheduled for primary total knee arthroplasty by four fellowship trained surgeons will be eligible for inclusion.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients will be excluded if their medical history presents chronic opioid use (greater than 3 month use),
  • pregnancy,
  • history of intolerance to medications in the study, and substantial substance abuse.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

128 participants in 2 patient groups

Adductor Canal Block
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in this group received local infiltration of bupivacaine in the adductor canal after surgery, in addition to the periarticular injection intra-op.
Treatment:
Drug: Bupivacaine
Drug: Ropivacaine
Procedure: Periarticular Injection
Procedure: Adductor Canal Block
Periarticular Injection
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Patients in this group received a bandaid at the presumed adductor canal injection site, in addition to the periarticular injection intra-op.
Treatment:
Drug: Ropivacaine
Procedure: Periarticular Injection

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Charles C Yu, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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