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The purpose of this study is to determine if ultrasound guided femoral nerve blocks (localized anesthesia in the upper thigh) provide effective pain relief in adult patients with hip fractures in the emergency department and to determine if femoral nerve blocks can then be used to reduce the use of injected analgesia (anesthesia), therefore also causing fewer adverse effects associated with injected analgesia (such as bruising at the site of injection).
100 patients with hip fractures will be enrolled in the study. Patients will be randomly assigned to receive a femoral nerve block (FNB) plus injected analgesia or standard care (SC), which is injected analgesia alone.
Using guidance from an ultrasound machine, the FNB group will have 20ml of 0.5% bupivacaine (a local anesthetic of long duration) injected into the front of the thigh, at the site of pain. Patients randomized to the SC group will receive an injection of saline (saltwater) so that no neither the patient or the treating physician knows to which group the patient was randomized. All blocks will be performed in the emergency department by an emergency physician trained in the use of ultrasound and ultrasound guided nerve blocks.
Subjects will be asked to rate their pain on a numeric pain scale both before and after intervention (30 min, 60 min, 12 hrs and 24 hrs after injection, as long as the patient is in the ER still). Additional data to be collected includes demographics, vital signs, and course of treatment resulting from the ED visit.
Hypothesis: US-guided femoral nerve blocks can provide effective pain control and possibly decrease or eliminate the need for narcotics.
Full description
Hip fractures are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in the elderly. In the acute setting, safe and effective pain control is of the utmost importance. At present, this is typically achieved with the use of parenteral opioids. However in older individuals, who often have other medical comorbidities, the use of narcotics for pain control must be balanced with their potentially deleterious consequences: namely respiratory depression, hypotension, and mental confusion. Both poor pain control and the use of opioid medications have been associated with acute confusional states in the elderly. 1,2 Regional anesthesia can possibly provide adjunctive or even alternative pain control that is both safe and effective.Femoral nerve blocks, using local anesthetics, have been described as a method to reduce pain and the requirement for systemic analgesia, specifically opioids. Prior research has demonstrated feasibility and effective pain control of the femoral nerve block in the ED setting. Bedside ultrasound (US) can be used to precisely visualize the femoral neurovascular anatomy when performing a femoral nerve block and has distinct advantages when performing this procedure in the ED setting.
Study Objectives The primary aim of this study is to determine the relative effectiveness of ultrasound guided femoral nerve blocks in older adult patients with hip fractures in the emergency department as compared with parenteral narcotics alone. A secondary aim of this study is to determine if femoral nerve blocks reduce both the use of parenteral narcotics and the incidence adverse effects associated with parenteral analgesia (delirium, hypotension, respiratory depression) in hip fracture patients both in the emergency department and during their hospital stay.
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38 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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