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I. Background:
Patients with multiple rib fractures are challenging from both pulmonary and analgesia perspectives. Adequate pain management is essential in prevention of complications secondary to decreased inspiratory volume. Significant morbidity and mortality of rib fractures is secondary to severe pain that limits ribcage movement, decreases inspiratory volumes and causes inadequate cough. Decreased vital capacity predisposes patients to atelectasis, abnormal mucous clearance and pneumonia. The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of the serratus anterior plane block (SAPB) in improvement of vital capacity in patients with multiple unilateral rib fractures when compared to conventional management with medications. Currently, evidence of efficacy of SAPB in managing pain secondary to multiple rib fractures is limited to case reports and series, none of which evaluate vital capacity.
II. Significance:
The findings of this study may indicate that SAPB is superior to pharmacological management in increasing vital capacity in patients with multiple unilateral rib fractures and suggest SAPB for first line therapy in patients with rib fractures. The findings may decrease the risk of pulmonary complications as well as the use of opiates in management of multiple rib fractures in the Emergency Department especially in patients with numerous comorbidities and contraindications to conventional treatment modalities. This study may support the need for training emergency medicine physicians in bedside SAPB in order to provide the optimal therapy for patient with multiple unilateral rib fractures.
III. Study Objectives:
The primary objectives are to evaluate whether ultrasound guided SAPB results in a greater improvement in percent predicted vital capacity compared to standard therapy with a sham injection. The investigators will also evaluate pain scores and the safety profile of the SAPB procedure compared to those receiving standard analgesia.
IV. Hypothesis:
The primary hypothesis is that SAPB is superior to sham injection in improving the percent of predicted vital capacity. The secondary hypothesis is that SAPB will have greater improvement in pain scores and have a superior safety profile compared to placebo injection.
Full description
STUDY DESIGN
This is a single center prospective, randomized, blinded clinical trial with a convenience sample that will be conducted in the Emergency Department of an urban level I trauma center.
A. Identify and enroll all patients coming in to the ED patient with presumed or clinically apparent 2 or more unilateral rib fractures between T3 to T9, with a resting pain score of ≥5. All patients meeting exclusion criteria will be excluded.
B. Randomization procedure:
C. Injection
D. Slow Vital Capacity (SVC) Measurement
E. Pain scores
Design:
A. Potential study patients will be identified through review of the emergency department (ED) electronic board, and ED physicians will also screen for potential study patients. Pain scores are assessed in triage as is standard in the ED.
B. If the patient has pain from presumed or clinically apparent 2 or more unilateral rib fractures between T3 to T9, and he/she has a resting pain score of ≥5 on the Numeric Pain Rating Scale, where 0 is no pain, 5 is moderate pain, and 10 is the worst possible pain upon initial assessment, then he/she will be eligible to participate in the study.
The patient will then be asked to participate if he/she does not have any exclusion criteria.
C. At time of enrollment, the patient will have recorded pain scores, vital signs, and slow vital capacity measured.
D. All patients will then receive as their initial analgesic oral acetaminophen 975 mg followed by morphine sulfate 0.05 mg/kg IV rounded to the nearest milligram.
E. Each patient will then be randomized in either of two arms:
Ultrasound guided serratus anterior plane block (SAPB) with 30mL 0.25% bupivacaine with epinephrine.
Ultrasound guided serratus anterior plane injection with placebo injection with 30mL of normal saline.
Investigators will be blinded to the arm that the patient has been randomized to, as the randomization will occur through the pharmacy dispensing the medication.
Using an online randomizer in blocks of 10, the pharmacy will dispense either 30mL of normal saline for the sham group, or 30mL of 0.25% bupivacaine with epinephrine for the nerve block group.
All patients will receive either SAPB or placebo injection within an hour of receiving the initial analgesics of acetaminophen and morphine.
If the patient still has a pain score ≥5 thirty minutes after the injection, the treating physician will be informed and the patient will be medicated at the treating physician's discretion.
The patient will be followed up with up to 24 hours throughout their hospital stay.
Data Collection Procedures:
A. Demographics 1. Age, sex, ethnicity, height B. Past medical history 1. Smoking status (current, prior, never smoker), diabetes, cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, if patient uses home oxygen C. Injury Mechanism
Side of rib fractures
Number of rib fractures on x-ray and on CT chest
Rib fracture location: anterior, lateral, posterior, T1-12
Type of imaging showing rib fractures
Presence of following: atelectasis, hemothorax, infiltrate (right/left), interstitial edema, pneumothorax, pulmonary contusion E. Medication
Any medications type and dose given prior to randomization
F. At Time 0 (time of enrollment):
Vital signs
Resting pain score from 0-10
Deep breath pain score from 0-10
Slow Vital Capacity (SVC)
a. Measured until 3 measurements are within 150mL of each other b. % predicted SVC is measured based on NHANES III Calculator using age, sex, ethnicity and height. If ethnicity not included in calculator will select Caucasian.
c. Maximum SVC and maximum % predicted SVC
Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting G. At Time 30 minutes post injection
Vital signs
Resting pain score from 0-10
Deep breath pain score from 0-10
Slow Vital Capacity (SVC)
Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting H. At Time 60 minutes post injection
Measured until 3 measurements are within 150mL of each other
% predicted SVC is measured based on NHANES III Calculator using age, sex, ethnicity and height. If ethnicity not included in calculator will select Caucasian.
Maximum SVC and maximum % predicted SVC
Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting I. At Time 3-6 hours post injection
Vital signs 2. Resting pain score from 0-10 3. Deep breath pain score from 0-10 4. Slow Vital Capacity (SVC)
Measured until 3 measurements are within 150mL of each other
% predicted SVC is measured based on NHANES III Calculator using age, sex, ethnicity and height. If ethnicity not included in calculator will select Caucasian.
Maximum SVC and maximum % predicted SVC 4. Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting J. At Time 12 hours post injection 1. Vital signs 2. Resting pain score from 0-10 3. Deep breath pain score from 0-10 5. Slow Vital Capacity (SVC)
Measured until 3 measurements are within 150mL of each other
% predicted SVC is measured based on NHANES III Calculator using age, sex, ethnicity and height. If ethnicity not included in calculator will select Caucasian.
Maximum SVC and maximum % predicted SVC
Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting J. On 24 hours post injection
Vital signs
Resting pain score from 0-10
Deep breath pain score from 0-10
Slow Vital Capacity (SVC)
Measured until 3 measurements are within 150mL of each other
% predicted SVC is measured based on NHANES III Calculator using age, sex, ethnicity and height. If ethnicity not included in calculator will select Caucasian.
Maximum SVC and maximum % predicted SVC 5. Symptoms after injection: sedation, dizziness, dysarthria, nausea, new cardiac rhythm (significant tachycardia or bradycardia, SVT, etc), new significantly increased shortness of breath, perioral numbness, pruritis, seizure, syncope, tinnitus, vomiting K. Slow vital capacity
Researchers will be trained on appropriate incentive spirometry technique by the respiratory therapy team and their accuracy will be confirmed 2. Patients will then be instructed to perform SVC, we will get 3 SVC measurements within 150mL of each other and then record the maximum SVC.
Percent predicted vital capacity will be calculating using NHANES III L. Time to first rescue analgesia post injection M. Medications during first 24 hours of hospital stay
24 hour total morphine milligram equivalent consumption
Calculated based on CDC Morphine Milligram Equivalence (MME) Calculator: https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/prescribing/app.html 2. Any antemetics used after injection within 24 hours after enrollment 3. Time to administration of first rescue analgesia post injection N. Nerve Block performed during inpatient stay
List date/time/type of any additional nerve blocks performed for rib fracture pain after the study injection during the patient's hospital stay
O. Pulmonary complications:
New O2 requirement, BIPAP or intubation, transfer to ICU for respiratory issue, development of pneumonia, readmission for pulmonary issue, new need for home O2 P. Nerve Block Complications
Development of cellulitis at site of block during hospital stay 2. Pneumothorax occurring within 12 hours of injection Q. Discharge Data
If cellulitis developed at the site of injection during hospital stay
If a pneumothorax on the same side of the injection occurred within 12 hours of block R. Imaging
Videos of the nerve block performance will be recorded in each patient. These images will later be de-identified and reviewed by two independent reviewers not involved in the study to determine visually whether the planar spread of anesthetic was correctly placed or not correctly placed.
Enrollment
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Interventional model
Masking
3 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Judy Lin, MD; Antonios Likourezos, MA, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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