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This study is being done to find out which medicine combination provides better pain relief after surgery in children. Children who are having surgery below the belly button (called infra-umbilical surgery) will receive general anesthesia and a type of pain-blocking injection called a caudal block. This block helps reduce pain after surgery.
The study will compare two types of caudal injections:
One group will receive Bupivacaine alone, a commonly used local anesthetic.
The other group will receive Bupivacaine combined with Dexmedetomidine, a medicine that might help the pain relief last longer.
The main question the researchers want to answer is:
Does adding Dexmedetomidine to Bupivacaine increase the duration of pain relief after surgery in children?
Researchers will also look at:
How long it takes before the child needs the first dose of pain medicine after surgery
How much pain medicine is used in the first 24 hours
How long any movement problems (motor block) last
Whether there are any side effects
Each child will be randomly assigned (like flipping a coin) to one of the two groups. The caudal block will be done after the surgery is completed, while the child is still under anesthesia. The nurse assessing the child's pain will not know which medicine the child received.
Children will be monitored for pain using a standard scoring system (FLACC scale) every few hours after surgery. If the pain score is high (7 or more), the child will receive intravenous paracetamol. Researchers will record how long the pain relief lasts, when the first pain medicine is needed, and the total amount of pain medicine used in the first 24 hours.
The study aims to help doctors choose the most effective and safe method to reduce post-surgery pain in children.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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