Tourniquet Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ketamine Reduces Tourniquet Pain In Patients Undergoing Lower Limb Surgery Under Spinal Anaesthesia
A prospective, double blind, randomised controlled trial to evaluate the effect of ketamine
in reducing tourniquet pain for patients undergoing lower limb surgery under spinal
anaesthesia.
Secondary Objective To evaluate the effect of ketamine in attenuating TIH for patients
undergoing lower limb surgery under spinal anaesthesia.
Primary Objective To evaluate the effect of ketamine in reducing tourniquet pain for patients
undergoing lower limb surgery under spinal anaesthesia.
Secondary Objective To evaluate the effect of ketamine in attenuating TIH for patients
undergoing lower limb surgery under spinal anaesthesia.
This will be a prospective, double blind, randomised controlled trial by multiple operators,
who are medical officers in the Department of Anaesthesia, University Malaya Medical Centre.
60 patients will be recruited into the study. All patients recruited will be subjected to
standard dose of spinal anaesthesia and randomly assigned into 2 different groups.
Methodology Patients will be fasted for at least 6 hours prior to their surgery. Oral
midazolam 7.5 mg will be given to healthy adult from age 18-60 and 3.75mg will be given to
adult age range from 60-65years as premedication prior to sending patients to the operating
theatre.
Patients will be randomly assigned by principal investigator into one of two groups by using
computer generated randomized numbers:
1. Control group will receive an intravenous (IV) infusion of 10 ml of normal saline in a
10 ml syringe over 10 minutes start 10 minutes before pneumatic tourniquet inflation.
Throughout procedure patient will receive 10ml/hour normal saline infusion until
operation finish.
2. Ketamine group will receive an IV infusion of 0.25mg/kg of ketamine in a 10 ml syringe
over 10 minutes start 10 minutes before pneumatic tourniquet inflation. Throughout
procedure patient will receive 0.25mg/kg of ketamine infusion in a 10ml syringe running
at 10ml/hour until operation finish.
The study drug will be prepared on the morning of surgery by the principal investigator and
anaesthetists in charge of the case is blinded to the grouping and to the drug. Standard
monitoring with continuous electrocardiography (ECG), non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP)
monitoring and pulse oximetry will be used for all patients. IV access will be established
and co-loading of IV Hartman's solution 10ml/kg will be given. A baseline blood pressure
reading of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), mean arterial
pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) will be taken prior to spinal anaesthesia. Patients will
receive a spinal anaesthesia under aseptic technique using a 25-27 gauge Pencan® spinal
needle. They will be given a dose of heavy bupivacaine 0.5% 2.5mls with fentanyl 20mcg added
into the solution.
A pneumatic tourniquet using will be applied to the lower limb and inflated at 250mmHg above
the systolic blood pressure. No additional sedation will be given to the patient
intra-operatively.
Pain score will be assessed by blinded investigator using the 100 mm visual analog scale for
pain (VAS for pain). Pain score using the VAS of 0 mm to 100mm will be recorded before
application of the tourniquet(baseline), immediately after application of the tourniquet and
thereafter every 10 minutes. SBP, DBP, MAP and HR will also be recorded at 10 minute
intervals after the start of tourniquet inflation. The VAS and the blood pressure will be
recorded at 10 minutes interval until the first reading after tourniquet deflation.
During the study period, if the VAS for pain score exceeds 40mm or if the SBP is elevated
more than 30%, a dose of IV fentanyl 0.5 mcg/kg will be administered as rescue analgesia at 5
minutes interval and it will be recorded. If more than 3 doses of fentanyl given, case will
be dropped out and manage according to local protocol (convert to general anaesthesia). If
the SBP is persistently elevated more than 30% after 3 doses of IV fentanyl, they will be
given IV labetalol 2.5mg and converted to GA and they will be dropped out from the study.
Maximum duration of tourniquet inflation was 130 minutes, after which surgeon would be
advised to momentarily deflate the tourniquet and the study would be ended.
Statistical Analysis Normally distributed continuous data will be analyzed using t-test while
non-parametric data will be analyzed by Mann Whitney U test using IBM SPSS Statistic version
23. Categorical data will be analyzed with Chi-square test and its non-parametric equivalent,
Fisher's Exact test where appropriate. A p value < 0.05 will be regarded as statistically
significant.
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