Cesarean Delivery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Efficacy and Side Effects of Intrathecal Morphine and TAP Block for Post-cesarean Analgesia
Summary Brief Summary Standard care for pain relief after cesarean delivery is spinal morphine. Spinal morphine may be unsuitable for patients having general anesthetic or prior morphine-related side effects and can be less effective in patients with morphine tolerance. An alternative is a TAP block where local anesthetic is deposited between the abdominal muscles consequently numbing the area and providing pain relief. The investigators believe a TAP block will provide equivalent pain relief to spinal morphine.
Detailed Description In North America, the standard of care is neuraxial morphine. This is
an effective analgesic, but can still cause problems with nausea, vomiting and itching.
Spinal morphine may be unsuitable for patients who have had morphine-related side effects in
the past and can be less effective in patients with morphine tolerance. It is also poorly
suited for patients who have had a general anesthetic, as anesthesiologists do not routinely
access the spinal space purely for analgesia. It is only when they are using the spinal
route for surgical anesthesia, that they will also deposit morphine to provide pain relief
after surgery.
The abdominal wall incision is an important contributor to pain following a cesarean
delivery. The nerves supplying the anterior abdominal wall between the internal oblique and
transversus abdominis muscles. By depositing local anesthetic solution between these muscles
on each side, it is possible to block all these nerves and provide analgesia for the
incision of the anterior abdominal wall. This is known as the transversus abdominis plane
block or TAP block.
Studies have shown the TAP block to be useful for midline laparotomies for open
prostatectomies, bowel resection and as rescue analgesia for abdominal surgery. There are
two studies which look specifically at TAP block after cesarean delivery but none of them
have compared it directly the current standard.
This study is a direct comparison of spinal morphine and TAP block. Obviously, adequate
analgesia is of paramount importance to the patient and those caring for her. Studies to
date indicate that the TAP block provides similar analgesia to spinal morphine in the early
post-operative period. Therefore it would be a reasonable alternative for those patients who
cannot have spinal morphine or who can not tolerate spinal morphine due to its side effects.
The primary objective will be to investigate whether the tranversus abdominis plane block
provides equivalent analgesia post-cesarean delivery, as intrathecal morphine.
The secondary objective will be to determine whether there is a difference in post-operative
abdominal scar pain, at three months post-surgery.
This study will be a prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, double blinded study.
The study will involve two groups. Both groups will have spinal anesthesia for the surgery
provided with 9-12 mg heavy bupivacaine and 10 mcg fentanyl.
1. Control group: standard care plus a placebo block.
2. Intervention group: no additional spinal medications will be given and an
ultrasound-guided TAP Block will be given instead of the standard intrathecal morphine.
Standard post-cesarean analgesia and PONV orders will be resumed post-delivery.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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