Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05940454

Pericapsular Nerve Group Block in Shoulder Surgery

Efficacy of Pericapsular Nerve Group Block in the Prevention of Postoperative Pain in Shoulder Surgery

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
Selcuk University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Dear Patient, You have been scheduled for shoulder surgery by your surgeon. This surgery is performed under general anesthesia, that is, by putting the patient to sleep, and then moderate or severe pain is experienced. In order to prevent this post-operative pain, painkillers are given through the vascular access or the operated area, namely the shoulder, is locally anesthetized. Many techniques are used to numb the shoulder locally. One of these techniques is the pericapsular nerve group block and it is a newly defined technique. In this block, some of the nerves that carry the pain sensation of the shoulder are temporarily anesthetized with local anesthetics. This study will investigate how effective this block is in reducing pain associated with shoulder surgery.

Detailed description

Dear Patient, You have been scheduled for shoulder surgery by your surgeon. This surgery is performed under general anesthesia, that is, by putting the patient to sleep, and then moderate or severe pain is experienced. In order to prevent this pain to be experienced, analgesics are given through the vascular access or the operated area, namely the shoulder, is locally anesthetized. Different techniques are used to numb the shoulder locally. One of these techniques is pericapsular nerve group block. In this block, some of the nerves that carry the pain sensation of the shoulder are temporarily anesthetized with local anesthetics. Thus, it is aimed to reduce post-operative pain. In this study, we plan to investigate how effective the pericapsular nerve group block is on postoperative pain. In this scientific study, patients will be randomly divided into two groups. Pericapsular nerve group block will be applied to one group of patients, while the other group will not be blocked. Pain medication will be administered intravenously to both groups before waking them up, and at the same time, a device called 'Patient Controlled Analgesia' (PCA) containing a very strong pain medication will be inserted in all patients in the service. This device; It is a device that contains analgesics and gives analgesics to the patient through the vascular access according to the patient's request, and it works with the help of a button on it. When the patient feels pain, he will press the button and the device will give the medicine to the patient in a predetermined dose and time. The device records the total amount of pain medication sent in 24 hours on its screen. The amount of medication delivered by this device will be compared between patients with and without block. Thus, the effect of pericapsular nerve group block on postoperative pain will be investigated. What are the procedures to be applied in the research? The surgery that will be applied to you is performed under general anesthesia. Pericapsular nerve group block, which is one of the pain relief methods we apply for shoulder surgery; It involves administering a local anesthetic drug with the help of a needle between the muscles in the shoulder and numbing your shoulder area. After the blocking procedure, painful stimulus will be given and it will be checked whether you have pain and loss of sensation and what it is worth. If there is loss of feeling, the block will be considered successful. After the evaluation of the block procedure is completed, you will be given general anesthesia, that is, you will be put to sleep. At the end of the surgery and at the 4th, 8th, 12th and 24th hours after the surgery, the severity of your pain will be evaluated and the total amount of analgesic consumed will be recorded. A scale that includes scoring pain between 0 and 10, called "NRS (numerical rating scale)" will be used. With this scale, you will be asked to give a score between 0 and 10 according to the severity of the pain. 0 points; "no pain", 5 points; moderate pain, and 10 points means "the most severe pain the patient has ever felt".

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREPericapsular nerve group blockThe patient's arm is externally rotated and abducted at 45 degrees. A longitudinal linear ultrasound probe is placed between the coracoid and the humeral head. After defining the humeral head, the tendon of the subscapular muscle and the deltoid muscle on it, a 50 mm needle is inserted with the "in-plane" technique. When the needle passes through the deltoid muscle and touches the subscapularis tendon, a hard bone-like tissue is felt and the needle is not advanced any further. It is noteworthy that the subscapularis tendon is very rigid and resistant to needle penetration when performing the pericapsular nerve group block. The needle tip is placed between the deltoid muscle and the subscapularis tendon and a local anesthetic drug (20 ml, %0.5 bupivacain hydrochlorur) is injected

Timeline

Start date
2023-08-01
Primary completion
2023-11-01
Completion
2023-11-30
First posted
2023-07-11
Last updated
2023-07-11

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05940454. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.