Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Per-operative Low-Dose Ketamine For Postoperative Pain Relief In Patients Undergoing Bariatric Surgery: A Randomised Study
The surgical interventions for treating morbid obesity, i.e. bypass procedure and sleeve
gastrectomy are collectively covered under the term `bariatric surgery`. The growth of
bariatric surgery has seen consonant development of anaesthesia techniques so as to ensure
patient safety and facilitate post-surgery outcome. Conventionally, balanced general
anaesthesia techniques routinely use opioids peri-operatively for intra-operative
haemodynamic homeostasis and postoperative pain relief. However, since the morbidly obese
patients have high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea(OSA) and other co-morbidities the
same technique when employed in the morbidly obese patients hampers early and intermediate
postoperative recovery due to the occurrence of side effects, such as, sedation, PONV,
respiratory depression, depressed GI-mobility. The above stated side effects, have lead to
increased propensity for postoperative cardiac and pulmonary complications. Obese patients
are more vulnerable and sensitive to the narcotics and sedatives, these drugs need to be
employed judiciously in these patients. On the other hand, the reduction in opioid use may
result in acute post-operative pain that may limit post-surgery rehabilitation. Therefore, we
need to minimise opioid use and employ some other drugs which besides having analgesia, has a
opioid-sparing effect also.
Ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, has analgesic properties in
sub-anaesthetic doses. When used in low dose (0.2mg/kg), it is an analgesic,
anti-hyperalgesic, and prevents development of opioid tolerance. On a conceptual basis, a key
advantage of ketamine is that it can reduces post-operative pain and use of opioid when used
per-operatively. Therefore, a regimen which avoid or minimise use of opioid is likely to
decrease opioid-related postoperative morbidity in these patients undergoing bariatric
surgery.In view of the above, a clinical research is highly desirable to study techniques to
decrease the use of opioids in obese surgical patients.This prospective randomised two-arm
study aims to assess the effect of low-dose ketamine on postoperative pain relief and
opioid-sparing ability in obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery.
After obtaining approval from the hospital ethics committee and written informed consent from
the patients, this prospective randomised study will be conducted on 76 patients belonging to
ASA physical patients status II and III of either sex, scheduled to undergo laparoscopic
bariatric surgery (sleeve gastrectomy, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass) under general anaesthesia.
The patients will be randomly allocated by computer generated numbers to one of the following
two groups of 38 patients each.
Group 1[Ketamine + Fentanyl Group, n=38]: Pre-induction fentanyl 1-mcg/kg, ketamine 0.5-mg/kg
after induction, followed by intra-operative fentanyl infusion of 0.5-mcg/kg/hr + ketamine
infusion of 0.2-mg/kg/hr
Group 2[Fentanyl Group, n=38]: Pre-induction fentanyl 1-mcg/kg, saline after induction
followed by intra-operative fentanyl infusion of 0.5-mcg/kg/hr + saline infusion.
Both the groups will receive intravenous PCA of fentanyl post-operatively.
Randomisation, Allocation Concealment:
The patients will be randomly allocated to one of the two groups based on a
computer-generated random number table
(url:stattrek.com/statistics/random-number-generator.aspx). Randomisation sequence
concealment will include opaque-sealed envelopes with alphabetic codes whose distribution
will be in control of an independent analyst. The envelopes will be opened; patient's
data-slip will be pasted on them, and will be sent back to the control analyst.
Blinding Strategy:
The attending anaesthesiologist will be blinded to the intra-operative infusions used.
Postoperative patient recovery profile will also be evaluated by an independent assess or
blinded to the intra-operative anaesthesia technique.
Management of Anaesthesia:
Premedication
All patients will be receive tablet ranitidine-150 mg night before and on morning of
surgery.They will be instructed to fast for at least 8- hours before surgery. Clear fluids
will be allowed till 2 hours before surgery.
Intra-operative Monitoring
Two peripheral venous lines (18G/20G catheter) will be secured. Standard monitoring including
5-lead ECG, non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP), pulse oximeter, end-tidal carbon dioxide
(EtCO2) and end-tidal gas monitoring will be applied. Additional monitoring will include
depth of anaesthesia monitoring using Bi-spectral index (BIS) and neuromuscular monitoring
using train-of-four response.
Anaesthesia Technique
All patients will be pre-oxygenated with 100% oxygen for at least 3-minutes prior to
induction of anaesthesia. All the drugs (study + control) will be administered based on lean
body weight (LBW). Patients in the KF group will receive pre-induction fentanyl-citrate
l-µg/kg IV and ketamine 0.5-mg/kg after induction whereas patients in the Fentanyl group will
receive pre-induction fentanyl-citrate l-µg/kg IV and saline as in above group. Anaesthesia
will be induced with propofol 2-2.5mg/kg titrated to a BIS-value of 50.. After induction of
anaesthesia, atracurium besylate 0.5-mg/kg will be administered for skeletal muscle
relaxation to facilitate tracheal intubation. Ventilator settings for CMV, tracheal tube size
[7.5-mm I.D (male), 6.5-mm I.D (female)], and breathing circuit (circle-CO2 absorber system)
will be the standardised in all the patients. The patients in the Ketamine + Fentanyl group
will receive fentanyl infusion at 0.5-mcg/kg/hr and ketamine infusion of 0.2-mg/kg/hr. The
patients in the Fentanyl group will receive fentanyl infusion at 0.5-mcg/kg/hr and saline
infusion. The LBW in obesity patients scheduled to undergo bariatric surgery will be
calculated based on the following formulae:
9270 x TBW (kg)/6680 + (216 x BMI) [men]
9270 x TBW (kg)/8780 + (244 x BMI) [women]
Desflurane in oxygen-nitruos oxide mixture (FiO2 0.50) will be used for maintenance in both
the groups to maintain a BIS of 40-60. Intra-operative muscle relaxation will be maintained
using atracurium boluses controlled by train-of-four response on peripheral neuromuscular
monitor. Thirty minutes before the end of surgery, non-opioid analgesics, such as paracetamol
1-gm will be administered to the patient. Desflurane delivery will be stopped at the point of
completion of skin closure. Residual neuromuscular blockade (assessed with train-of-four
response) will be reversed with neostigmine (50-µg/kg) and glycopyrrolate (20-µg/kg).
After discontinuation of anaesthesia delivery (0-time point) the time to eye opening and time
to extubation will be determined. After tracheal extubation the patients will be shifted to
postoperative recovery room adjoining OT suites and will be closely observed for oxygenation
and ventilation status, pain (visual analogue score [VAS]), sedation (Modified OASS), and
PONV.
Intravenous Patient Controlled Analgesia (IV-PCA) pump containing fentanyl citrate-2.5 mcg/ml
will be attached to all the patients upon shifting to the recovery room. The IV-PCA pump
settings will be as follows: 0-ml basal dose; 4-ml PCA dose; 15-minutes lock out interval. A
baseline visual analogue scoring will be done after shifting the patient to the recovery room
(0-time point) followed by 2-hours, 4-hours, 8-hours, 12-hours, and 24-hours time points from
the baseline. Any adverse effects such as hypotension/ hypertension, bradycardia/tachycardia,
hypoxemia, giddiness will be recorded and treated. Post-surgery, time to alimentation post
surgery will be noted.
'Rescue' pain relief drug will include: diclofenac sodium 75 mg slow IV bolus for NRS>3 and
'rescue' antiemesis agent would be ondansetron 4-mg for a PONV score > 1.
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