Hernia, Inguinal Clinical Trial
Official title:
THE EFFECT OF DIFFERENT INDUCTION TECHNIQUES ON POSTOPERATIVE PAIN AND AGITATION IN CHILDREN
The objective of this study was to determine (a) whether patients anesthetized with intravenous propofol have less pain compared with sevofluorane for paediatric inguinal hernia and undescended testis operations and (b) whether intravenous propofol anesthesia has better quality of recovery compared with sevofluorane anesthesia in the immediate postoperative period after paediatric inguinal hernia and undescended testis operations.
DIFFERENT INDUCTION TECHNIQUES ON AGITATION AND POSTOPERATIVE PAIN IN CHILDREN AFTER
INGUINAL HERNIA AND CRYPTORCHIDISM Inguinal hernia and cryptorchidism are probably the most
common operations in the paediatric age group. Inguinal hernia is the most common indication
for surgery in the paediatric age group and the incidence of inguinal hernia in those
younger than 18 years old varies from 0.8 to 4.4% (1). Cryptorchidism is the most common
genital anomaly in boys and incidence is 3.5% of all full- term infants (2).
Advances in surgical techniques and anesthesia management most of the children can be
discharged on the day after these kind of operations (3). Most studies of analgesia in
pediatric day case surgery have focused on the postoperative pain risk at night, because it
becomes the great problem for the parent. Because half of children experience clinically
significant pain after discharge according to pain studies done for children (4).
Volatile anesthetics can activate peripheral neurons that play important role on pain
perception in postoperative period (3). Zhang et al reported that volatile anesthetics have
been demonstrated to have hyperalgesic effects (5). In addition the other studies reported
that volatile anesthetic induced pain enhancement was mediated by modulation of central
adrenergic and cholinergic transmission (6)(7). Also modulation of 5-Hidroxytriptamine3
receptor-mediated currents by volatile anesthetics may also play a role in their
pronociceptin effect (8)(9).
The recovery profile studies comparing IV propofol anesthesia with inhaled anesthetics have
shown a better postoperative analgesia with propofol (10)(11). A recent study Tan et al
shown that the patients anesthetized with intravenous propofol anesthesia for surgery had
less pain than patients anesthetized with sevofluorane (12). A different study by Cheng et
al investigating the postoperative analgesic effects of nicotine nasal spray coincidentally
found that patients anesthetized with propofol had less postoperative pain than patients
anesthetized with isofluorane over the postoperative 24 hours (13).
Animal studies suggested that propofol suppressed nociceptive behavior. Propofol known to
have nociceptive effects by activating transient receptor potential ion channel (14)(15) has
been demonstrated to have analgesic and antihyperalgesic properties at sedative doses in a
human pain model (16) In normal rat model, propofol has direct actions on the dorsal horn
neurons of the spinal cord, which played an important role in the processing of sensory
information (17) In a rat formalin model, propofol produced antinociceptive effect in a
dose-dependent manner (18). Moreover, subhypnotic doses of propofol has been demonstrated to
delay and weaken remifentanil induced post-infusion hyperalgesia in human (19).
The objective of this study was to determine (a) whether patients anesthetized with
intravenous propofol have less pain compared with sevofluorane for paediatric inguinal
hernia and undescended testis operations and (b) whether intravenous propofol anesthesia has
better quality of recovery compared with sevofluorane anesthesia in the immediate
postoperative period after paediatric inguinal hernia and undescended testis operations.
MATERIAL METHODS After obtaining institutional ethics committee approval and written
informed consent, 100 American Society of Anaesthesiologists I-II children, aged between 2
and 12 years undergoing elective surgery for inguinal hernia repair and undescended testis
were enrolled in the study. The study used a double-blind methodology with random allocation
to the two groups by a computer-generated list.
All patients' parents will be instructed on the use of the Wong-Baker Faces Pain scales for
pain assessment before the induction of anesthesia. Both of the hands will be applied
Eutectic Mixture of Local Anesthetics Cream (Lidocaine Hydrochloric acid, prilocaine, Astra
Zeneca, Istanbul, Turkey) 60 minutes before the operations by the nurse. All the children
were premedicated with midazolam hydrochloride 0.6 mg/kg orally; maximum 30 min prior to the
surgery and we made sure that the drug was given under the tongue to avoid first liver
passage. Patients will be monitored in the operating room. Heart rate (HR) mean arterial
pressure (MAP), and peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) were recorded. Patients will be
randomized into 2 groups using a computer-generated random number table: the first group
will be inducted with iv propofol (Group P) and after sevofluorane inhalation will continue,
the second group (Group S) will be inducted and continued with sevofluorane. Anesthesia was
maintained with sevofluorane titrated to a value of 40 bispectrial index.
I.Grup 1: Sevofluorane 8% mask induction and continue with 2% sevofluorane I.Grup 2:
Propofol 2.5mg/kg in induction and continue with 2% sevofluorane Fluid therapy was
standardized during and after surgery. During surgery, children received lactated Ringer's
solution 6 ml/ kg/ h whereas 5% dextrose with electrolytes was given at a rate of 4 ml/ kg/
h in the postoperative period. Induction of anesthesia is performed using oxygen (FiO2
0.33), nitrous oxide (FiO2 0.66), and sevofluorane (increasing concentrations up to 8%)
administered by mask. After sevofluorane induction intravenous cannula will be inserted. The
other group propofol 2.5mg/kg in induction and continue with 2% sevoflorane. After 0.5 mg/kg
rocuronium and 1 mcg/kg fentanyl will be applied before intubation. 5 minutes after
induction heart rate, tension arterial, saturation will be recorded. Both of the groups will
be maintained with 2% sevofluorane and 40% nitrous oxide. All the operations will be done
with the same technique by the same surgeon. After spontaneous breathing , the reverse will
be applied as 0.03 mg/kg neostigmine ve 0.01 mg/kg atropine intravenous. After reversal of
airway reflexes, the patients will be extubated. After extubation the patients will be in
postanesthesia recovery room. Operation time, anesthesia time will be recorded. First eye
opening, first verbal command follow, staying time in PACU, first analgesic time, ambulation
time, first oral intake time, extermination time will be recorded according to the
anesthesia completion time. Completion of the surgery, 20 mg/kg rectal paracetamol will be
applied as suppository form. However If VAS≥3 then 20 mg/kg paracetamol will be applied in
intravenous form. Heart rate, tension arterial, saturation, respiratory rate, agitation
scale, Wong-Baker Faces Pain rating scale for pain will be assessed and recorded. If
agitation score≥4 then 1mcg/kg fentanyl will be applied intravenously. Wong-Baker Faces Pain
rating scale will be taught to all parents and how to sign according to shapes of the faces
of all children (No pain-smiling face to most pain-crying face). Transition from PACU to
surgical ward was considered safe when patient had achieved a Modified Aldrete Score 9 for
at least 10 min, and SpO2 95% with oxygen 2 l/min or 92% without oxygen, signified recovery
of physical, mental, and physiological function to near preanesthetic levels. Furthermore,
10-point analogue scales were used to measure parents' satisfaction with their child's
overall anaesthetic and surgical care and satisfaction with their participation in
decisionmaking (0 . not at all satisfied, 10 . extremely satisfied). All adverse events
(bronchospasm, laryngospasm, desaturation, hypotension, bleeding, reoperation) will be
recorded for postoperative 0h(PACU), 10 min, 20 min, 30 min, 40 min, 50 min, 1h, 2h, 4h, 6h,
12h, 24h.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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