Analgesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Protective Analgesia in Caesarean Section Using Intravenous Paracetamol: A Prospective Randomised Controlled Trial
Protective analgesia in caesarean section using intravenous paracetamol: A prospective
randomised controlled trial. Cesarean section a common surgical procedure in women. The
parturients undergoing CS experience severe to moderate postoperative pain. Pain relief is
very important to the patient as it causes discomfort which affects hemodynamic
intraoperative and increases the risk of postoperative complications. Analgesia is crucial
to postoperative recovery.
Aims: To investigate the efficacy of combined administration of paracetamol, as protective
multimodal analgesia, and standard spinal anesthesia in the reduction of postoperative pain
following cesarean section.
Sixty adult Parturients undergoing CS will participate in a single-centered, randomized,
double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial divided into 2 groups 30 each. The intervention
group will receive 1 gr of intravenous paracetamol in 100 ml normal saline only 15 minutes
prior to spinal anesthesia induction. The control group will receive 100 ml normal saline IV
identical in size and shape and manner to the experimental group, 15 minutes prior to
induction of spinal anesthesia. We will measure postoperative Visual Analog Scale (VAS) pain
score, postoperative time to analgesia in PACU and number of postoperative analgesic doses
within 24 hours.
Cesarean section (CS) is one of most common surgical procedure in women. Parturients
undergoing CS, experience severe to moderate postoperative pain. Pain after CS may impair
the ability of mother to care and feed her child, early ambulation, and discharge. About
12.3% of parturients experience pain scores enough to affect infant care up to 6 months
after CS.
All of perioperative stress effects, before delivery of the baby, such as, skin incision,
need various approaches of treatment, which may include systemic and neuraxial analgesia.
Surgical trauma causes immediate changes in both peripheral and central nervous systems,
leading to augmentation of pain perception in the final destination - the cerebral cortex.
The surgical incision induces secretion of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), which increases the
production of prostaglandins (PGs), and which in turn excites peripheral nociceptors. These
special pain fibers not only transmit the pain signal to the central nervous system, but
also amplify tissue sensitivity to the surgical trauma, giving rise to the phenomenon known
as "local hyperalgesia".
Improper pain control during the perioperative period leads to complications, which may
affect the outcome of CS. Pain relief is very important to the patient as the pain causes
discomfort which affects hemodynamic intraoperative and increases the risk of postoperative
complications as atelectasis, ineffective, coughing and inadequate ventilation. Adequate
pain control is essential not only intraoperatively, but also in immediate postoperative
period to cover long time period postoperatively. The major role of intra- or post-operative
management of pain is to reduce the dose of medication and to lessen side-effects, while
providing adequate analgesia. This role may best be accomplished with multimodal protective
analgesia or preemptive analgesia. Protective multimodal analgesia term is described as any
intraoperative analgesic agents able to control pain-induced sensitization of the central
nervous system. Preemptive analgesia had been defined as an antinociceptive treatment,
starts before surgery that to prevent establishment of altered central afferent input from
injuries and its goal is to decrease pain by timing the analgesic's peak pharmacodynamic
effect with anticipated onset of pain or peak pain response.
Protective analgesia is distinguished from pre-emptive analgesia in that it focuses less on
the treatment and on the relatively timing and the anesthetic intervention but rather more
on the mechanisms of action. Protective analgesia aims to decrease the impact of the
nociceptive barrage associated with noxious pre-operative, intra-operative, and/or
post-operative events/stimuli.
Systemic opioids either intra- or post-operatively have potential of serious adverse
reactions or risks for neonate and they act on opioid center in central nervous system.
Paracetamol (Acetaminophen) is mostly used for treating pain and fever, typically for mild
to moderate pain. In combination with opioid agents, paracetamol is used for more severe
pain such as in cases of cancer and after surgery.
Paracetamol is devoid of risks related to opioid and acts at both central and peripheral
points of the pain pathway, by direct inhibition of N-methyl-D-Aspartate receptors and
inhibition of the cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) pathway.
Spinal anesthesia using local anesthetics combined with opioids affects the transmission,
modulation and modification stages of nociceptive afferent impulses and its analgesic
qualities are superior to local anesthesia alone.
Study where paracetamol as pre-emptive analgesia was compared to placebo in paediatric after
tonsillectomy patients, found that pain score was lower in the experimental group.
In patients undergoing lower extremity surgery with spinal anesthesia, protective
acetaminophen may enhance analgesia and decrease postoperative analgesic consumption.
To our knowledge, no studies have investigated the combined use of paracetamol with spinal
anesthesia/analgesia for pre, intra and postoperative multimodal pain protection in
parturients undergoing cesarean section.
The aim of our study is therefore; to assess the efficacy of combined administration of
paracetamol and standard spinal anesthesia in the reduction of postoperative pain following
cesarean section.
Materials and Methods
Study population
A single-center, prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study will be
conducted at Bnai-Zion Medical Center, Haifa, Israel (following the approval and according
to the regulations of the Helsinki Committee).
Inclusion criteria consist of parturient age between 18 and 40 years, a maximal American
Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Score of II, parturients undergoing first elective
cesarean section.
Exclusion criteria consist of current or previous chronic NSAID or opioid treatment, liver
or renal insufficiency, asthma, cardiovascular disease, allergy to paracetamol or other
NSAIDs. Parturients with ASA III, IV and whom past a spinal anesthesia failure will be also
excluded from the study. All parturient participants will provide written informed consent.
Study protocol
Parturients will be blindly and randomly allocated to 2 groups, consisting of 30 patients
each, randomization will be performed with a computer-generated. The experimental group
participants will be treated with 1 gr paracetamol (under the brand name Paracetamol® B.
Braun, Germany) intravenous provided in 100 ml normal saline in a single intravenous dose in
a double-blind mode. Where in the control placebo group participants will be provided with
the same bag of 100 ml normal saline medication free. Each bag contains the patient
allocation number, the package identification number, the bag type (A for paracetamol or B
for placebo). Separate sealed envelopes will be provided to the investigator to be opened in
the event of a serious adverse event. The treatment will be conducted in both groups at the
same time, 15 minutes prior to spinal anesthesia induction. [The control group will receive
100 ml normal saline identical in size and shape to the treatment drug, 15 minutes prior to
induction of spinal anesthesia.] All parturients will receive spinal anesthesia using
10-12mg of bupivacaine for local anesthesia and 25μg of fentanyl. The agents will be
administered by senior anesthesiologists, who are not involved in data collection. The same
surgical team will perform all cesarean sections.
Data collection
In addition to demographic data parturient age, weight, the following parameters will be
collected:
- Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and peripheral oxygen
saturation.
- The pain intensity level presented in VAS scale (0- none, 10-the worst imaginable pain)
will be estimated and marked at arrival in PACU ,2, 4, 8, 12 and 24 hours
postoperatively will be estimated.
- Postoperative time to first administration of analgesic dose (Time-to-Analgesia; TTA)
will be noted.
- Number of analgesic doses administered within the first 24 hours after surgery.
- When in the PACU and in surgical ward, the VAS score ≥4, 1-3 mg of morphine IV in
titration boluses will be administrated.
- Pain relief will be evaluated and recorded on a five-point scale (0 - none, 1 - a
little, 2 - some, 3- a lot, and 4- complete). Analgesic agents will be titrated till
pain score reaches zero or stage 1 (a little pain).
- Side effects such as local pain, nausea, vomiting, hypotension, be recorded.
Power and statistical analysis
A sample size of 30 parturients by group is calculated to detect a significant difference of
20% or more in intraoperative opioid consumption with a power of 100% two-tailed and a
significant level of 5% (alpha of 0.05) corresponding to level of confidence 95%. Data will
be reported as mean ± SD and counts (numbers).
With the following assumptions:
- A 30% difference in postoperative analgesic doses
- A 40 minutes difference for TTA
- A 30 % difference in the postoperative VAS score. Statistical assessment includes
analysis of Student's t-test for continuous data and VAS pain data. Fisher's exact
t-test will be used to analyze nominal data. P < 0.05 will be considered to be
significant for all tests. All analyses will be performed using the SPSS statistical
software, version 15 (SPSS Inc.; Chicago, IL, USA).
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