Greater Block Quality and Lower Pain at Discharge With US-Guided Peripheral Nerve Block vs IVRA .
Efficacy of ultrasound-guided forearm nerve block versus forearm intravenous regional anaesthesia in patients undergoing carpal tunnel release: A randomized controlled trial
PLoS One. 2021 Feb 19;16(2): e0246863One hundred adult patients were randomize to undergo a carpal tunnel release surgery under an ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve block (n=50) or a forearm intravenous regional anesthesia (IVRA; n=50). The primary outcome of interest was peri-operative analgesic efficacy, or quality of the block (complete vs incomplete). Secondary outcomes of interest included the following: pain evaluated using a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS), surgical time, total operative room time, and surgeon and patient satisfaction. NRS pain was measured at incision, during block performance, at discharge, and 24-hours post-surgery. Results of this trial revealed statistically significantly greater block quality in the peripheral nerve block compared to the IVRA group (p=0.019). Surgeon and patient satisfaction were also statistically significantly greater in the peripheral nerve block compared to the IVRA group (p=0.0016; p=0.0023, respectively). Moreover, patients at discharge had a statistically significantly lower pain intensity in the peripheral nerve block vs forearm IVRA group (p<0.001). The proportion of complete blocks was greater in the peripheral nerve block intervention when compared with the control forearm IVRA (p=0.019). All other outcomes were not statistically significantly between the 2 groups at all timepoints (p>0.05 for all).
Vollständigen ACE-Bericht freischalten
Sie haben Zugang zu 4 weiteren KOSTENLOSEN Artikeln in diesem Monat.
Klicken Sie unten, um diese ACE Reports freizuschalten und anzusehen
Jetzt freischalten
Kritische Beurteilungen der neuesten, hochwirksamen randomisierten kontrollierten Studien und systematischen Übersichten in der Orthopädie
Zugang zu OrthoEvidence-Podcast-Inhalten, einschließlich Kooperationen mit dem Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Interviews mit international anerkannten Chirurgen und Diskussionsrunden zu orthopädischen Neuigkeiten und Themen
Abonnement von The Pulse, einem zweimal wöchentlich erscheinenden evidenzbasierten Newsletter, der Ihnen helfen soll, bessere klinische Entscheidungen zu treffen
Exklusiver Zugang zu Originalartikeln, einschließlich eigener systematischer Übersichten, sowie zu Artikeln über Methoden der Gesundheitsforschung und aktuelle orthopädische Themen