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The study is a single-centre, open-label randomized comparative trial. Adult patients admitted to the emergency department for a hip fracture will be enrolled.
Pericapsular nerve block (PENG-block) is a regional anesthesia technique developed primarily as an analgesic technique in a perioperative setting during hip fractures related surgical procedures. Some authors propose the use of PENG-Block as an alternative to fascia iliaca block and femoral block for the analgesic management of hip fracture in the emergency department, but scientific evidence is weak in this setting.
The hypothesis of this study is that the use of PENG Block in the emergency department provides a better pain management for patients suffering from hip fractures with less opioid use.
Full description
Pericapsular nerve block (PENG-block) is a regional anesthesia technique first described in 2018 and developed primarily as an analgesic technique in a perioperative setting during hip fractures related surgical procedures. The analgesic treatment with PENG-Block prevents motor block and thus reduces risk of intra-hospital falls. It also allows patients to get back on their feet more quickly and thus reduces loss of autonomy and risk of dependency. Moreover, it is a technique with a good safety profile that appears to be appropriate, feasible and effective in the context of the analgesic management of hip fractures in the emergency department. Therefore, some authors propose the use of PENG Block as an alternative to fascia iliaca block and femoral block for the analgesic management of this type of fracture.
The main objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of PENG Block combined with conventional multimodal analgesia when compared with conventional multimodal analgesia alone in terms of reduction of total morphine consumption in patients admitted to the emergency department for a hip fracture. The primary endpoint is the total morphine consumption from admission up to 24 hours after randomization or until surgery if the patient is operated on before 24 hours. The secondary objectives are : to assess whether the use of PENG-Block has an influence on the pain felt by the patient compared to conventional analgesia alone; to describe the tolerance of analgesia in the 2 groups; to assess whether the use of PENG-Block has an influence on the duration of hospitalization in the emergency department compared to conventional analgesia alone.
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Exclusion criteria
Patients for who it is impossible to collect the pain assessment scale
Patients with known or suspected bleeding disorders :
Patients in whom it is impossible to perform the PENG-Block: Body Mass Index (BMI) > 40, adenopathy or infection at the puncture site, allergy to the anesthetics used
Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding women
Patients under judicial protection or judicial safeguard
Any other reason which, in the opinion of the investigator, could interfere with the evaluation of the study objectives
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36 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Magali CESANA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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