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The aim of the study is to compare the effectiveness and safety of scalp block versus intravenous fentanyl in pain control intraoperatively in craniotomy patients. Most of the previous studies compared the effect of scalp block versus fentanyl or opioids in postoperative pain
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The history will be obtained from patient. The patients fasting 8 hours preoperatively will be examined and assessed, especially neurologically, to exclude any neurological deficit that may affect the results. Pre-operative laboratories will be reviewed for all patients as (complete blood picture, renal function tests, liver function tests, and coagulation profile) .
Patients will be assigned randomly by using a computer -generated table of random numbers, placing them in sealed envelopes, into two groups:
Pre-oxygenation with 100% oxygen will last 3 minutes, followed by IV induction with Propofol (2 mg/kg), Atracurium (0.5 mg/kg), and Fentanyl (1 mcg/kg). The patient will be placed on inhaled Isoflurane, and smooth intubation will be performed. Invasive blood pressure monitoring will be set up via the non-dominant radial artery, and a central venous line will be inserted in the internal jugular vein using ultrasound.
A scalp block will be done blindly for group B, while group A will receive Fentanyl (1 mcg/kg/hr) prior to Mayfield placement and skin incision. Throughout the operation, continuous monitoring of Electrocardiogram, Heart rate, invasive blood pressure (IBP), oxygen saturation and urine output will occur.
The scalp block will be performed under aseptic conditions by qualified personnel, with the patient in the supine position, using a landmark technique to target the relevant nerves for the blockage in group A.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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