Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial of Lidocaine Infusion Plus Ketamine Injection Versus Placebo to Decrease Postoperative Ileus
Bowel function after bowel surgery is delayed (postoperative ileus)by both opiates and the surgery itself. We hypothesized that decreasing opiate use by other analgesics will speed the return of bowel function after surgery. Lidocaine and Ketamine are drugs that appear to be synergistic and do not slow peristalsis. This study is a Randomised Controlled Trial of Lidocaine Infusion Plus Ketamine Injection versus Placebo to to determine whether they will decrease opiate use and then whether decreased opiate use will speed the return of bowel function.
Introduction: Postoperative ileus is a normal response to the surgical handling of bowel
that causes transient impairment of bowel motility after abdominal surgery. It is
characterized by distension, absence of bowel sounds, and lack of passage of flatus and
stool. The duration of postoperative ileus is related to the degree of surgical manipulation
and the location of surgery. Colonic surgery is associated with the longest duration of
ileus. Morphine patient-controlled intravenous analgesia (PCIA) is commonly used to provide
pain control after bowel surgery. The bowel wall contains opiate receptors that decrease
bowel peristalsis in the presence of morphine. Thus, both surgery and PCIA slow return of
normal bowel function.
Lidocaine and ketamine are non-opioid analgesics that have been shown to be safe and
efficacious in low doses when combined with morphine for post-operative pain control. Since
the addition of lidocaine or ketamine to a morphine PCIA regimen results in lower total use
of morphine, and since lidocaine or ketamine does not slow peristalsis, , it is reasonable
to expect that low-dose lidocaine or ketamine plus PCIA morphine will result in faster
return of bowel function than PCIA morphine alone.
Intravenous lidocaine was first shown to relieve cancer pain in the 1950s. Since then,
intravenous lidocaine has been shown also to relieve pain after a wide variety of surgeries.
Ketamine is a non-opioid analgesic that has been shown to be safe and efficacious in very
low doses when combined with morphine for post-operative pain control . A review of ketamine
for postoperative pain control recently completed by Dr McKay has shown that ketamine is
most efficacious when given after a painful surgical insult, and that preoperative
bezodiazepines prevent ketamine-induced hallucinations (submitted for publication).
Groudine, in patients undergoing radical retropubic prostatectomy, determined that
intravenous lidocaine infusion intraoperatively decreased the duration of postoperative
ileus, decreased the pain scores postoperatively, and resulted in a 50% reduction in
morphine use, and a 20% reduction in hospitalization time. This was felt to be due to early
ambulation, earlier times to passing gas and having a bowel movement, and faster advancement
to a full diet and oral analgesics. Lidocaine plasma levels were well below toxic range.
We propose a double-blind placebo-controlled study of patients undergoing elective or urgent
colon surgery with an anastomotic procedure. All patients will receive normal PCA morphine
in addition to study drugs or placebo. Research will be conducted at Saskatoon teaching
hospitals. This procedure was chosen as it is associated with a longer duration of ileus
compared to other abdominal surgeries and more likely to show a significant treatment
effect.
If previous data is applicable to colonic surgery then we can expect a decrease in
postoperative analgesic requirements, earlier return of bowel function, earlier progression
to full diet and earlier discharge dates.
The dose of lidocaine we propose has been shown to be safe in thousands of patients for whom
it was used to treat arrhythmias; that of ketamine in more than twenty studies of
postoperative pain control.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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