Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Intravenous Infusion of Lidocaine, Magnesium Sulphate and Remifentanil Perioperatively in Patients Undergoing Mastectomy: a Prospective, Randomized and Double-blind Study
This study aims to compare the quality of perioperative analgesia of lidocaine, magnesium sulphate and remifentanil in patients undergoing mastectomy
The opioid analgesics are commonly used in clinical practice for pain management in the
perioperative period. However, many side effects are associated with its use, such as
respiratory depression, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, itching, urinary retention,
constipation, hyperalgesia and impaired immune function. Therefore, alternative techniques
and drugs have been used to replace their use. One is the intravenous infusion of lidocaine,
a local anesthetic widely used in anesthetic practice. Another is intravenous infusion of
magnesium sulphate, a bivalent salt used as a central nervous system depressor, reducing
intracranial hypertension, in the treatment of epilepsy; eclampsia; in chronic alcoholism;
in hyaline membranes, such as hyperosmotic diuretic; in malnutrition; hypomagnesaemia; in
thrombotic microangiopathy; in sickle cell anemia, uterine tetany and atypical ventricular
tachycardia. Studies show that the use alone or combined of lidocaine and magnesium sulphate
during surgery significantly decreased postoperative pain. The mechanisms of analgesia this
local anesthetic in surgical trauma may be blocking neuronal transmission in the lesion site
alleviating neurogenic response, and anti-inflammatory systemic intrinsic activity.
Intraoperative lidocaine promotes, besides analgesia, decreased consumption of both
inhalational anesthetic and opioids; faster return of bowel movements; decreasing the
production of interleukins and reduction of airway reactivity. This anesthetic also has
significant anti-inflammatory properties, reduces cytokine release both in vitro and in vivo
by inhibiting neutrophil activation. N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors are critically
involved in the induction and maintenance of neuronal hyperexcitability after traumatic
events, therefore, the use of NMDA antagonists before the incision reduces the excitability
of the central nervous system and its result is the reduction of clinical hyperalgesia.
Magnesium sulphate is an antagonist of glutamate NMDA receptor, which gives analgesic,
anticonvulsant and sedative. It acts as a natural physiological calcium antagonist
regulating access to the intracellular space. Shows the effect of muscle relaxation by
inhibiting the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction, thereby
hypermagnesaemia decreases sensitivity to acetylcholine of the endplate and the potential
amplitude endplate. Besides there are few studies with use of these adjuvants during the
perioperative period, the intravenous injection of local anesthetic still arouses oddity
among professionals; therefore, the investigators interest in the subject.
The patients underwent a prospective, randomized, double blind study, in which the examiners
responsible for intra and post-operative will not know which group they were randomly
allocated: Lidocaine group (n = 30); Lidocaine and Magnesium group (n = 30); Magnesium group
(n = 30) or Remifentanil group (n = 30). Rapid infusion of 0.9% saline 500 ml, in the M and
LM group, is added to this solution the loading dose of magnesium sulfate with 50 mg/kg and
in group L will only be infused saline 0.9% . Two infusion pumps containing the result of
randomization: Lidocaine 3 mg/kg/h and 0.9% saline (L group); magnesium sulphate 15 mg/kg/h
and 0.9% saline (M group); lidocaine 3 mg/kg/h and magnesium sulphate 15 mg/kg/hr (LM
group); and Remifentanil group (R group).
In the clinical record, the following information will be emphasized: Blood pressure and
heart rate intraoperative, perioperative side effects, quantify pain by Visual Analogue
Scale (VAS) (ranging from 0 to 10 cm, zero being found when the patient is no pain and ten,
with maximum or unbearable pain), Verbal Rating Scale (VRS), consisting of a list of phrases
(no pain, mild pain, moderate pain, intense pain, maximum pain) and qualification of pain
assessed by the amount of analgesics required postoperatively and the time to request them.
The results were analyzed statistically with the Statistical Package for Social Sciences
(SPSS) version 22 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, EUA) using parametric and nonparametric tests,
depending on the nature of the variables studied. Data were tested for normality using the
Shapiro-Wilk test. Measures of central tendency (means) and dispersion (standard deviation)
were used. The level of significance was set at < 0.05. The following tests were used:
Mann-Whitney test for age, duration of anesthesia and surgery, time to first analgesic
supplementation, total amount of analgesics, pain intensity; Student t-test for weight and
height.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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