Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT01344252

Topical Jelly and Intracameral Anesthesia Versus Subtenon Anesthesia, in Cataract Surgery

Topical Jelly and Intracameral Anesthesia Versus Subtenon Anesthesia, in Cataract Surgery: Preference and Surgical Conditions

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The options for anesthesia in cataract surgery described are: general, regional or local. The local strategy, it may be by periocular blocking(subtenon, peribulbar or retrobulbar), subconjunctival or topical. The risks faced by subconjunctival, peribulbar or retrobulbar, have made subtenon and topical strategies the most used. Likewise, to improve the effectiveness of the topical strategy was added gel topical lidocaine and intracameral dose of lidocaine. Subtenon and topical anesthesia are two safe strategies and there were performed multiple studies showing that both are effective in controlling pain, but showing a slight superiority of subtenon. This difference does not appear to be clinically significant. In turn, the addition of gel and intracameral anesthesia, improved pain control. However, lack evidence to compare patient preference when using topical gel and intracameral anesthesia versus sub-Tenon anesthesia. Multiple advantages has the topical anesthesia. Besides being a safe strategy for the patient, offers a rapid visual recovery, no generates blepharoptosis or diplopia postoperatively, subconjunctival hemorrhage and chemosis. Because of this the investigators plan to conduct a study comparing the efficacy of gel topical and intracameral anesthesia versus subtenon anesthesia in cataract surgery with scleral incision, assessing the patient's preference Hypothesis: Topical administration of lidocaine in gel and intracameral anesthesia is a better strategy that subtenon anesthesia in cataract surgery

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGLidocaineWe will made anesthesia with topical lidocaine and compared with subtenon anesthesia

Timeline

Start date
2011-04-01
First posted
2011-04-29
Last updated
2023-03-06

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Argentina

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01344252. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.