Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is looking to see if a regional block placed on each side of the incision after surgery helps with pain relief. Ultrasound-guided pectointercostal fascia blocks will be placed at the conclusion of surgery following application of dressings. Patients will be in the supine position with the surgical drapes in place. The blocks are performed using a high frequency linear transducer with aseptic technique. The investigators hypothesize that placement of PIF blocks and catheters will decrease acute postoperative pain from midline sternotomy in fast track cardiac surgery patients compared to the current standard of care. A physician will place an ultrasound guided pecto-intercostal fascial plane blocks bilaterally at the conclusion of surgery. They will also leave a catheter, similar to a small IV, between the muscle layers where the freezing medication goes. This will let the investigators give more freezing medication over the first 24 hours after surgery. The freezing medication blocks the pain signals from travelling to your brain from your incision, which might help participants need fewer narcotics after surgery. Some of the research on this block shows a trend toward reduced pain, but the use of a catheter to allow repeat doses of freezing medication has not been studied. The investigators hope to show that this regional block means participants need less opioids (narcotics) in the first 2 days after their heart surgery. In order to see whether the regional block is helpful there will be two groups of study participants. Both groups will receive infusion catheters covered with opaque bandages however one group will receive the study drug (ropivacaine) and the other will not (placebo). To reduce the risks to placebo group participants, those participants will have a catheter taped to their skin surface under an opaque dressing. This will give the illusion of block placement without the risks of a needle poking through skin. Both groups will still be given pain medications by IV or by mouth as needed after the surgery.


Clinical Trial Description

Acute postoperative pain at median sternotomy sites is common in cardiac surgery patients. Inadequate control of acute pain can lead to sympathetic activation, hemodynamic sequelae, respiratory compromise, delirium and contributes to the development of chronic pain. Parental opioids have long been at the forefront of perioperative pain management for cardiac surgery patients, historically in large intravenous doses. With the onset of fast-track cardiac anesthesia (FTCA) which emphasizes reduced periods of post-operative mechanical ventilation, intensive care unit stay and overall health care cost; new strategies for managing post-operative pain in cardiac surgery patients are required. Opioid focused strategies contribute to many side effects including sedation, confusion, apnea, nausea, emesis, and ileusF , which can prevent effective fast tracking of these patients. FTCA has highlighted the potential for regional anesthetic techniques to revolutionize post-operative cardiac surgery care. Though thoracic epidural analgesia offers excellent analgesia for post-sternotomy pain, the small but catastrophic risk of epidural hematoma in heparinized patients has hindered it from becoming standard of care. Over the last decade, various thoracic wall blocks have been developed and shown to benefit patients presenting for thoracic or breast surgeries, and sternotomies. Of these, fascial plane thoracic wall blocks offer the advantages of being simple to perform ultrasound equipment and having low complications rates. One such block is the pectointercostal fascia (PIF) block which was first described in 2014 as an analgesic adjunct for breast procedures. In this block the fascial plane between the pectoralis major and internal intercostal muscles is infiltrated with local anesthetic with the aim of anesthetizing the anterior cutaneous branches of the intercostal nerves, thereby providing analgesia to the anterior chest wall from T2 to T6 with a single injection. The block can be placed with ultrasound guidance with the patient in the supine position - making it easy to place in the operating room or as a rescue block in CVICU. Despite the higher volumes of local anesthetic required for a plane block of this nature, previous studies have shown that the serum levels of local anesthetic remain well below the toxic rangeI,J. Injection into the fascial plane allows for excellent spread of local anesthetic along multiple rib spaces, precluding the need for multiple injections. It also opens up a space for placement of a catheter thus providing the option of longer term analgesia in postoperative patients. While PIF blocks avoid the hemodynamic side effects and risk of neuraxial complications associated with thoracic epidurals and paravertebral catheters they are not without risk. These risks include potential hemothorax, pneumothorax, chest wall hematoma, local anesthetic systemic toxicity and surgical site infection. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05146453
Study type Interventional
Source University of Alberta
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 4
Start date September 22, 2022
Completion date June 11, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02489526 - Evaluate the Analgesic Efficacy and Safety of VVZ-149 Injections for Post-Operative Pain Following Colorectal Surgery Phase 2
Completed NCT05635916 - Trial of Liposomal Bupivacaine for TKA Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06028126 - Superficial Parasternal Intercostal Plane Block in Cardiac Surgery Trial N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03591172 - Using Three Different Final Irrigants and Showing Their Effects on the Success of Revascularization N/A
Completed NCT01686802 - Post-operative Oral Morphine Versus Ibuprofen Phase 2
Completed NCT01667445 - Evaluation of the Use of Spinal Epimorph in Total Knee Arthroplasty Phase 4
Completed NCT01444924 - Transversus Abdominis Plane Blocks for Patients Undergoing Robotic Gynecologic Oncology Surgery Phase 2
Completed NCT00968955 - Effect of Local Infiltration Analgesia in Total Hip Arthroplasty Phase 4
Completed NCT00830089 - Trial of a Transversus Abdominis Plane (TAP) Block in Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery N/A
Completed NCT00847093 - LMX-4 for Postoperative Pain Management in Infants and Children Undergoing Penoplasty Surgery Phase 4
Terminated NCT00875862 - Shoulder Adhesive Capsulitis and Ambulatory Continuous Interscalene Nerve Blocks Phase 4
Completed NCT00390312 - Efficacy and Safety of Intranasal Morphine for Pain After Third Molar Extraction Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05278494 - Dextromethorphan for Treatment of Postoperative Pain N/A
Recruiting NCT05973045 - Investigation of the Effect of Distention Medium Temperature on Image Quality, Hyponatremia Risk, and Post-operative Pain in Operative Hysteroscopy N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04999670 - Fascial Closure and Post-caesarean Pain N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04346407 - Dronabinol for Post-operative Pain After Lumbar Fusion Phase 4
Completed NCT03635515 - Occurrence of Post-op Pain Following Gentlewave N/A
Terminated NCT03201809 - Comparison of Preoperative Ultrasound Guided Pectoralis Nerve Block Placement Versus Intra-operative Placement: A Prospective Randomized Trial N/A
Completed NCT03254056 - Fascial Closure Techniques Post-Operative Pain Laparoscopy N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02555423 - The Effects of Serratus Plane Block Performed Under Direct Vision on Post-operative Pain in Breast Surgery N/A