Hip Fracture Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ultrasound Guided Femoral (3 in 1) Nerve Block Versus Ultrasound Guided Fascia Iliacus Compartment Block Versus Standard Treatment for Pain Control in Patients With Hip Fractures in the Emergency Department
Hip Fracture (HFx) is a painful injury that is often treated in the Emergency Department (ED)
with intravenous opiates. However, this class of medications may cause deleterious side
effects. An alternative analgesic approach involves regional anesthesia. The investigators
attempted to determine (1) whether ultrasound guided peripheral nerve blocks (UPNBs) could be
safely performed in an ED setting, (2) whether UPNBs would be more effective than standard
treatment in controlling pain from HFx and (3) which of two UPNBs was superior for pain
relief.
A convenience sample of patients with an isolated HFx and a pain score > 5/10 were enrolled
and randomized to one of three arms: (1) Ultrasound guided 3-in-1 femoral nerve block (UFNB),
(2) Ultrasound guided fascia iliaca compartment block (UFIB), or (3) IVMS. Patients indicated
their pain from 0 (no pain) to 10 (extreme pain).
Hip fracture (HFx) is a painful orthopedic emergency that commonly presents to the Emergency
Department (ED). There are approximately 320,000 HFx diagnosed annually in the United States,
with this number expected to increase as the population ages. It has previously been shown
that patients with pain from HFx are undermedicated while in the ED, particularly in
overcrowded facilities. Current treatment for ED patients who are experiencing pain from
acute HFx is often with intravenous morphine sulfate (IVMS). Morphine can have many
undesirable side effects, but of particular concern are delirium, hypotension and respiratory
depression. These complications may be accentuated in elderly patients and may necessitate
increased patient monitoring and greater utilization of limited ED resources.An alternative
to systemic opioid analgesia involves peripheral nerve blockade. Anesthesiologists frequently
perform nerve blocks in the peri-operative and post-operative period to control pain in
patients undergoing hip surgery. Traditionally, nerve stimulators were used to place the
nerve block. However, ultrasonography is being used with increasing frequency to facilitate
placement of these peripheral nerve blocks. As Emergency Physicians (EP) become more facile
with the use of bedside sonography, ultrasound guided peripheral nerve blockade for HFx may
be ideally suited for the ED environment, where one injection could control pain for many
hours. The 3-in-1 femoral nerve block (FNB), in which anesthetic is injected adjacent to the
femoral nerve but also affects the lateral femoral cutaneous and the obturator nerves, has
been shown to be as effective as morphine for pain control of HFx in the ED. Sonographic
guidance has been shown to increase the success rate of this block, decrease the time to
analgesia, decrease the amount of local anesthetic needed to achieve adequate regional
anesthesia, and decrease the incidence of inadvertent intravascular injection.
To date, there has been limited research describing the utilization of ultrasound guided
femoral nerve blocks in an ED setting. Beaudoin et al. performed a feasibility study
demonstrating that EP could effectively perform ultrasound guided femoral nerve blocks. Reid
et al. found a significantly decreased time to complete analgesia when using sonographic
guidance compared to an anatomic landmark technique. In this later study, anesthesia was
assessed by checking skin sensation. Neither of these studies utilized a 3-in-1 nerve block,
which may provide greater pain relief for patients with HFx.
The fascia iliaca compartment block (FIB) is also effective for treating pain due to HFx. It
has been shown in the pediatric anesthesia and pediatric emergency medicine literature that
it provides adequate analgesia, and may provide more effective analgesia than the FNB for
femur fractures in children. Most of the studies describe the FIB being performed using a
technique based on anatomic landmarks. One recent study described ultrasound guidance of the
FIB (UFIB) increasing the efficacy of the sensory blockade (12). UFIB has not previously been
studied in the ED setting.
We attempted to determine (1) whether ultrasound guided peripheral nerve blocks (UPNB) could
be safely performed in an ED setting, (2) whether UPNB would be more effective than standard
treatment in controlling pain from HFx in which a 2.5 unit decrease in pain scores was
considered clinically significant, and (3) which of two UPNB was superior for pain relief.
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