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CompletedNCT06352853

Scalpel Versus Diathermy in Transverse Abdominal Skin Incision During Cesarean Section

A Comparative Study Between the Use of Scalpel Versus Diathermy in Opening the Transverse Abdominal Skin Incision During Cesarean Section

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Cairo University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study aims to compare between using of diathermy versus scalpel in making skin incision during cesarean section to judge the variations in incisional time, incisional blood loss, postoperative pain, wound healing and wound complications.

Detailed description

Surgical scalpels are traditionally used for skin incisions during a Caesarean delivery; the great evolutions in electrosurgical devices bring an alternative method for skin incision by the usage of cutting diathermy. The current comparative study was conducted in Kasr Al-Ainy hospital obstetric theaters between January 2022 and June 2022. Consents were obtained from all participants. 120 participants were included in this study, divided into 2 groups 60 in each group;Diathermy group and scalpel group respectively . • Randomization achieved using computer generated randomization sequences. Allocation was in 1:1 ratio In both groups: 1. Pre-operative: patients received cefoperazone 1gm intravenous. In case of penicillin allergy, they received clindamycin intravenous. 2. A Pfannenstiel skin incision was made taken down through the subcutaneous tissue, rectus sheath and dissected from rectus muscle until peritoneum was visualized, * In scalpel group; an incision made by traditional method, with proper homeostasis by application of pressure to skin blood vessels and by ligating the subcutaneous bleeding as well as using of diathermy on coagulation mode. Then, the investigators used the scalpel to reach peritoneum. * In diathermy group; incision made using a small flat blade pen electrode, set on cutting mode and delivering a 120-wat (maximum) sinusoidal current, electrosurgical cutting performed without pressure or mechanical displacement. Then, the investigators used the scalpel to reach peritoneum. * The study compared incisional time by using digital clock, time established as follows: when skin incision made, the surgeon called out "start the clock". After opening the rectus sheath, the surgeon called out" stop the clock". Incision time is the difference between "start" and "stop". Also incision blood loss was calculated by weighing the swabs pre and postoperatively (1mg = 1ml). In incisional site no suction was used. •Also hemodynamic changes were compared between both groups that include: blood pressure (systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial blood pressure), pulse, oxygen saturation and electrocardiogram (ECG) changes. 3. Intra-operative: patient received Diclofenac sodium 50-100 mg intramuscular and postoperatively, they received paracetamol vial /6 hours in both groups. Closure of the skin in all cesarean sections was done by proline 2.0 for assessment of wound healing and complications. Postoperatively, the postoperative pain was compared for 24 hours by visual analogue scale (VAS) score, It is 11 points numeric scale ranges from "0" representing one pain extreme (e.g.: no pain) to "10" representing the other pain extreme (e.g.: "pain as bad as you can imagine" or "worst pain imaginable") this will be recorded at 2,4, 6,8, 10,12, 24 hours postoperatively. Lastly, wound healing was compared in both groups and complications like seroma, hematoma, ecchymosis, dehiscence and infection. The presence or absence of infection was assessed by Southampton grading system as following: G0: normal wound healing, G1: normal healing with mild bruising or erythema, G2: erythema plus other signs of inflammation, G3: clear or serosanguinous discharge and G4: purulent discharge and in this case wound culture was performed.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERSkin incision in Cesarean Section by DiathermySkin incision by diathermy
OTHERSkin incision in Cesarean Section by ScalpelSkin incision by scalpel

Timeline

Start date
2022-04-01
Primary completion
2022-09-01
Completion
2022-10-01
First posted
2024-04-08
Last updated
2024-04-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Egypt

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06352853. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Scalpel Versus Diathermy in Transverse Abdominal Skin Incision During Cesarean Section (NCT06352853) · Clinical Trials Directory