Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT04053491

Comparison of the Infraclavicular and Axillary Approaches for Continuous Ultrasound-guided Brachial Plexus Block.

Comparison of the Infraclavicular and Axillary Approaches for Continuous Ultrasound-guided Brachial Plexus Block: A Prospective Randomized Study

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Bordeaux · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Prospective randomized study comparing the axillary and the infraclavicular approaches for continuous brachial plexus block after hand surgery.

Detailed description

Regional anesthesia is considered as the gold standard for analgesia and anesthesia of hand surgeries. However, with a single-shot technique, a maximum of 13 hours of analgesia is obtained, even with a long-acting local anesthetic and adjuvants. For painful surgeries necessitating prolonged analgesia of more than 24 hours, continuous regional analgesia techniques have been described, using perinervous catheters. However, these techniques have a high incidence of failure. The most frequent causes of failure are catheter displacements, misplacement, and the distance between the targeted nerves. Many approaches have been described to insert these catheters (axillary, infraclavicular and supraclavicular), but the optimal approach remains unknown. Therefore, international and even local practices vary widely. Investigators plan to compare the axillary and the infraclavicular approaches in this randomized study, on 60 patients. In every group, an initial bolus will be given and then a perinervous catheter will be inserted by the allocated approach. The surgery will be done under regional anesthesia. The co-analgesia, the local anesthetic infusion and the follow-up will be standardized and will be the same in the two groups. The primary outcome will be an anesthesia score on 16 points previously described in other similar publication. The primary outcome will be at 24 hours after block realization, but it will be repeated at 48 hours. It will evaluate the degree of sensitive and motor blockade of every major nerve of the hand. Secondary outcomes will be the time, comfort and adverse effects of the technique, and postoperative pain, analgesia, satisfaction and adverse effects. The aim of this study is to help determine the optimal approach for brachial plexus catheter insertion, in order to improve analgesia, to decrease morphine consumption and its related adverse effects, and to improve patients and caregivers satisfaction.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREHand surgery under regional anesthesiaIn both groups, patients will benefit from an initial standardized bolus (long-acting local anesthetic, ropivacaine) to cover the operative period, via the allocated approach. Ultrasound guidance and the recommended standards monitors will be used in both groups. After the initial bolus, a catheter will be inserted via the allocated approach. Surgery will be done under regional anesthesia alone, unless there is a medical contraindication or if the patient asks for general anesthesia. Post-operative analgesia will be standardized with regular paracetamol, regular NSAID (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) and oxycodone if needed. The local anesthetics perfusion will be standardized. There will be a medical follow up at 24 and 48 hours where data will be collected.

Timeline

Start date
2019-09-01
Primary completion
2020-10-01
Completion
2020-10-01
First posted
2019-08-12
Last updated
2023-03-17

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04053491. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.