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Regional Analgesia in Combination With Cryoanalgesia to Prevent Acute Pain Following Nuss Procedure

P

Pomeranian Medical University Szczecin

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Acute Pain
Regional Anesthesia

Treatments

Device: regional analgesia with cryolesia

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05589246
PomeranianMU-KRIO

Details and patient eligibility

About

Funnel chest deformation is a painful procedure, which requires high doses and long time used of opioids. It makes difficult introduction of ERAS protocol. Intraoperative cryolesia of intercostal nerves serves great relief of pain after this procedures. However ablation of the nerves needs 12-24 hours to achieve effects. During this time the high doses of opioids are needed. It causes side effects (sedation makes rehabilitation difficult). On the other hand, percutaneus cryoablation performed 12-24 hours before Nuss procedure needs repeated general anaesthesia. The investigators hypothesed that regional analgesia (erector spine plain block) performed just before intraopertive cryolesia may cover time to full cryolesia effect.

Full description

Severe pain in the post-Nuss procedure needs the use of many analgesic drugs, including opioids. It may cause adverse side effects and difficulties with rehabilitation. Moreover, it increases the risk of complications and prolonged hospitalisation. Cryoanalgesia as a part of multimodal analgesia offers better analgesia than single regional techiques with drugs and fasilitate introduction of the enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol. However ablation of the nerves needs 12-24 hours to achieve effects. Regional analgesia (erector spine plain block) performed just before intraopertive cryolesia may cover time to full cryolesia effect.

This Before - After Study is a single institution pilot study designed to compare intraoperative cryolesia alone (control group) with the intervention group (cryolesia and bilateral erector spine plane block). It is designed for better management of acute pain in the pediatric population diagnosed with funnel-chest and treated using the modyfied Nuss method. Control group received standard care with cryolesia using the Cryo-S Painless device (Metrum - Cryoflex Polska Limited) and multimodal analgesia according the current guidelines. The intervention group received all of the above and regional analgesia (erector spine plain block, ESP block).

The aims of the study were the assessment the effectiveness of ESP block before full action of intraoperative cryoanalgesia as a method of acute pain control, safety of the method.

The results were compared in terms of demographics, pain levels, side effects of the pain relief medications in the postoperative period and lenght of hospitalization.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients undergoing pectus excavatum repair with modyfied minimal invasive thoracoscopic NUSS technique
  • aged 10 years or above 10 up to 18
  • informed consent signed for cryoanalgesia informed consent signed for regional analgesia

Exclusion criteria

  • Age of 9 years or below
  • Refuse to receive cryoanalgesia or regional analgesia as primary pain relief
  • Any contraindication to cryoanalgesia
  • Difficult follow-up for geographical reasons and/or impossibility by the patient to understand how to perform self-measurements

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

control
No Intervention group
Description:
intraoperative cryoanalgesia of intercostal nerves with multimodal analgesia
intervention
Experimental group
Description:
regional analgesia (ESP block) with intraoperative cryoanalgesia of intercostal nerves and multimodal analgesia
Treatment:
Device: regional analgesia with cryolesia

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Jowita Biernawska, MD PhD; Sławomir Zacha, MD PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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