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Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of this prospective, single blinded, comparative pilot study is to evaluate U/S guided serratus anterior plane catheter block (SAPB) versus patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) on the emergence of post - thoracotomy pain syndrome (PTPS). The investigator's assumed hypothesis is that; SAPB is an effective thoracic analgesic technique that may reduce the development of PTPS.


Clinical Trial Description

Lung cancer has the highest incidence of all malignancies worldwide & represents about 13% of all cancer victims. Lung cancer still represents the first cause of cancer deaths and lung resection surgeries could be the main therapeutic procedure. Hence, the number of thoracotomies is progressively increasing with more & more post- thoracotomy pain . Together with amputation, thoracotomy is considered the main etiology of severe & long-term acute and chronic post-surgical pain syndromes (CPSP). The prevalence of post - thoracotomy pain syndrome (PTPS) is variable (30-50%). The international association for the study of pain (IASP) has defined PTPS as "pain that recurs or persists along the thoracotomy scar at least 2 months after the procedure".Besides, PTPS is mostly described with neuropathic manifestations along the thoracotomy scar, mammary & submammary ipsilateral scapular & interscapular areas. Pain is often aching, burning with tingling, numbness, pruritis plus sensory loss and/or hypoesthesia.Preemptive post-thoracotomy analgesia is mostly multimodal & integrates both systemic & regional techniques. Systemic drugs (either given parenterally or through patient controlled - analgesia "PCA") include, NSAIDs, Cox - II inhibitors, paracetamol, opioids, ketamine (as N-methyl-D- aspartate blocker), gabapentins & pregabalin, selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors and/or duloxetine .Regional analgesic techniques include thoracic epidural analgesia (TEA) which, is considered by many as the gold standard analgesic mode for post-thoracotomy pain .Other regional analgesic techniques are paravertebral analgesia (PVB), intercostal nerve blocks and intrapleural analgesia.Recently SAPB has been practiced more widely as an U/S - guided, simple technique of effective post-thoracotomy analgesia which is comparable with standard techniques such as TEA and PVB. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03533426
Study type Interventional
Source National Cancer Institute, Egypt
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date March 27, 2018
Completion date July 15, 2018