Post Operative Urinary Retention Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Thoracic Epidural Administered Ropivacaine Versus Bupivacaine on Lower Urinary Tract Function: A Randomized, Controlled Study
Acute urinary retention is one of the most common complications after surgery and
anesthesia. Micturition depends on coordinated actions between the detrusor muscle and the
external urethral sphincter. Under the influence of epidural analgesia, patients may not
feel the sensation of bladder filling, which can result in urinary retention and bladder
overdistension. Overfilling of the bladder can stretch and in some cases permanently damage
the detrusor muscle. Because epidural anesthesia can be performed at various levels of the
spinal cord, it is possible to block only a portion of the spinal cord (segmental blockade).
Thoracic epidural analgesia with bupivacaine significantly inhibits the detrusor muscle
during voiding, resulting in clinically relevant post void residuals which required
monitoring or transurethral catheterisation. This bladder muscle inhibition is comparable to
a motor blockade. The epidural administration of ropivacaine during labour results in a
clinically relevant reduction of motor blocks.
The hypothesis is that thoracic epidural analgesia with the local anesthetics ropivacaine
leads to less significant changes in bladder function than bupivacaine as a control group,
in patients undergoing lumbotomy incision for renal surgery.
Background
Acute urinary retention is one of the most common complications after surgery and
anesthesia. It can occur in patients of both sexes and all age groups and after all types of
surgical procedures. It is linked to several factors including increased intravenous fluids,
postoperative pain and type of anaesthesia.
Micturition depends on coordinated actions between the detrusor muscle and the external
urethral sphincter. Motorneurons of both muscles are located in the sacral spinal cord and
coordination between them occurs in the pontine tegmentum of the caudal brain stem.
Motorneurons innervating the external urethral sphincter are located in the nucleus of Onuf,
extending from segment S1 to S3. The detrusor smooth muscle is innervated by parasympathetic
fibers, which reside in the sacral intermediolateral cell group and are located in S2-4.
Sympathetic fibers innervating the bladder and urethra play an important role in promoting
continence and are located in the intermediolateral cell group of the lumbar cord (L1-L4).
Most afferent fibers from the bladder enter the sacral cord through the pelvic nerve at
segments L4-S2 and the majority are thin myelinated or unmyelinated.
There are few studies on the urodynamic effects of various anaesthetic agents, which mainly
focused on lumbar epidural anaesthesia. Under the influence of epidural analgesia, patients
may not feel the sensation of bladder filling, which can result in urinary retention and
bladder overdistension. Overfilling of the bladder can stretch and in some cases permanently
damage the detrusor muscle.
Because epidural anesthesia can be performed at various levels of the spinal cord, it is
possible to block only a portion of the spinal cord (segmental blockade). Based on knowledge
of the bladder innervations, it can be assumed that epidural analgesia within segments T4-6
to T10-12 has no or minimal influences on lower urinary tract function.
In a previous study, the investigators found, against their expectations, that thoracic
epidural analgesia (TEA) with bupivacaine significantly inhibits the detrusor muscle during
voiding, resulting in clinically relevant post void residuals which required monitoring or
transurethral catheterisation 11. This detrusor inhibition is comparable to a motor
blockade.
In addition, it is known that the epidural administration of ropivacaine during labour
results in a clinically relevant reduction of motor blocks. However, the analgesic potency
of ropivacaine is approximately 60% that of bupivacaine.
Objective
The main objectives of this investigator initiated trial are:
- To analyse if a TEA with the local anesthetics ropivacaine leads to less detrusor atony
and thus resulting to lower incidence of postvoid residual urine volume resulting in
postoperative urinary retention.
- To compare urodynamic parameters (storage and voiding phases) during TEA with
ropivacaine versus bupivacaine.
Methods
Assessments of bladder function:
International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) will be used for assessment of lower urinary
tract symptoms preoperatively.
Urodynamic investigations will be performed: The first investigation will be done as
baseline data before attempted surgery.
Urodynamic investigations will be performed according to good urodynamic practice. After
placement of a 6 French transurethral dual channel catheter and a 14 French rectal balloon
catheter (Gaeltec, Dunvegan, Scotland), the bladder will be filled at a rate of 25 to 50
ml/min with Ringer's lactate solution at room temperature. Parameters of both the storage
phase (maximum cystometric capacity, bladder compliance) and voiding phase (detrusor
pressure at maximum flow rate (PdetQmax), maximum flow rate (Qmax) and PVR will be recorded.
All methods, definitions and units will be in accordance with the standards recommended by
the International Continence Society.
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Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Terminated |
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Phase 4 |