Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03886896

Intravenous Lidocaine in Children Undergoing Laparoscopic Appendectomy

Efficacy of Intravenous Lidocaine Infusion on Pain Relief in Children Undergoing Laparoscopic Appendectomy: Randomized Controlled Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
74 (actual)
Sponsor
Medical University of Warsaw · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Months – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Intravenous lidocaine - a potent local anesthetic with analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties has been shown to be an effective adjunct that reduces intra and postoperative opioid consumption and facilitates pain management in adults. In children population promising but limited evidence is available. The study was planned to evaluate the efficacy of continuous intravenous infusion of lidocaine to reduce opioid consumption during and after laparoscopic appendectomy in children.

Detailed description

Postoperative pain in children is still one of the most under diagnosed and under treated medical problems. It affects post-surgery recovery, mortality and morbidity, limits mobility. Untreated pain not only causes child's suffering but can decrease the pain threshold in the future or lead to the development of chronic pain. Postoperative analgesia has been traditionally based on opioids but as their use can be associated with adverse effects prolonging hospital stay and affecting recovery current guidelines focus on multimodal approaches involving numerous analgesics with different mechanism of action. Growing evidence suggests that intravenous lidocaine reduces intra- and postoperative requirement for opioids. Lidocaine has been proved to have analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties. It is also a potent peripheral nervous system modulator inhibiting peripheral and central sensitization. The studies performed in adult population have proved the efficacy of systemic lidocaine in postoperative pain treatment. It is an effective adjunct that reduces opioids consumption and facilitates pain management. As such lidocaine infusion has been included in postoperative pain management guidelines for adults. Studies on children population have promising results but high quality randomized controlled trials are still missing. The proposed study has been planned to evaluate the efficacy of continuous infusion of lidocaine as an adjunct to standard general anesthesia (involving fentanyl and sevoflurane) in reducing opioids consumption and facilitating postoperative pain control in children undergoing laparoscopic appendectomy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGLidocaineLidocaine infusion during surgery

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-22
Primary completion
2020-01-15
Completion
2020-01-17
First posted
2019-03-22
Last updated
2020-05-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Poland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03886896. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.