Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05165641 |
Other study ID # |
SPICHOL AvicennaMH |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 1, 2016 |
Est. completion date |
March 31, 2017 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2022 |
Source |
Avicenna Military Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Providing safe and efficient anesthesia and in a field hospital is a challenging situation.
This study investigated the feasibility and safety of thoracic spinal anesthesia for
small-incision open cholecystectomy in a deployed field hospital.
Description:
This study was conducted in a field hospital deployed in a rural area of the middle Atlas in
Morocco during the winters of 2016 and 2017. The Middle Atlas is a part of the Atlas mountain
range which is usually blocked and isolated by snow during the winter. The hospital deployed
was an inflatable tent hospital self-contained and self-sufficient. This field hospital
included the following components: a patient's ward (sixty beds), an operating theater with
one surgical table, a recovery room with 2 beds, a laboratory, an X-ray unit, a pharmacy, and
several exams rooms.
After approval by the Ethical review board of Avicenna Military Hospital, Marrakech, Morocco
(CERB7/2016), written informed consent was obtained from patients who agreed to participate
in the study.
The inclusion criteria were: uncomplicated symptomatic cholelithiasis confirmed by
preoperative ultrasound, age 18 years or older and American society of anesthesiologists
(ASA) physical status I, II or III. Exclusion criteria were: patients with acute
cholecystitis, suspected common bile duct stones, previous abdominal surgery, bleeding
diathesis, spinal abnormality, and allergy to any drug used in the study.
Patients were interviewed and examined by an anesthesiologist in a preoperative visit several
days before surgery. On arrival in the operating room the patient's non-invasive blood
pressure, oxygen saturation, and heart rate were monitored. Heart rate and blood pressure
were recorded every five minutes. Intravenous access was established in the forearm with an
18 Gauge catheter and patients received a preload with 10 ml/Kg of normal saline. Patients
were given 1mg midazolam intravenously for anxiolysis and oxygen 2-3 l /min was administered
by a nasal cannula. Cefazolin 2 g was injected as antimicrobial prophylaxis. Antiemetic
prophylaxis was also carried out with dexamethasone 4 mg IV.
Spinal anesthesia was performed at a lower thoracic level with the patient in the sitting
position. After local anesthesia with 1% lidocaine, the spinal puncture was done in the 10th
thoracic intervertebral space (T 10) through a median approach. A 27 Gg pencil-point needle
with an introducer was used (marquee). To identify T 10, the vertebra prominens (C7) was
palpated and the spinous processes were palpated caudally. Two senior anesthesiologists
performed all the spinal punctures. The progression of the spinal needle was cautious and
soft. The effort was made to stop the needle progression just after the tactile perception of
the dura mater. Once the flow of cerebrospinal fluid was obtained, 1.5 ml of hyperbaric
bupivacaine 5mg/ml (=7.5 mg) mixed with 0.5 ml of fentanyl 50 µg/ml (= 25 µg) was injected
and the spinal needle removed. Patients were asked to report any pain or paresthesia during
the puncture. The patient was then placed in a supine horizontal position. The level of
sensory block was assessed every 2 minutes (pinprick method). After an adequate sensory block
was obtained (T4 - T 12), surgery was allowed to start. The nasogastric tube was not inserted
unless the surgeon required it.
Patients were invited to report any discomfort or pain during surgery. Patients were asked to
assess any eventual pain on a numeric rating scale ranging from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst
possible pain). Perioperative pain scores were collected at skin incision and perioperative
pain and anxiety were treated with boluses of fentanyl 50 µg (maximum 100 µg) and midazolam 1
mg (maximum 5 mg). The need for additional sedation/analgesia and the doses administered were
recorded. Patients were informed about the possibility of switching to general anesthesia
(GA). Criteria for conversion to GA were: failure of spinal anesthesia, pain score > 4
despite a maximum dose of fentanyl, and difficult surgical conditions.
Two experienced surgeons performed all operations. Small incision open cholecystectomy was
performed with a 6 to 8 cm long transverse incision over the right rectus abdominis muscle,
as described by Rosenmuller [ref]. Surgeon s satisfaction was evaluated by asking surgeons to
assess the operative conditions on a numeric scale of 0 to 10 (0: worst surgical conditions,
10: best operative conditions). At the time of skin closure, a wound infiltration (muscular
compartment and subcutaneous fat) with 15 to 20ml of bupivacaine 0.25% was made.
The duration of surgery and perioperative incidents (hypotension, bradycardia nausea, and/or
vomiting) were recorded. Hypotension defined as a drop in the mean arterial blood pressure
(MAP) ≥20% below baseline was managed by IV boluses of ephedrine 6 mg. Bradycardia was
defined as heart rate <50 and treated with atropine 0.50 mg. Post-operative events were also
recorded: nausea and vomiting, urinary retention, pruritus, headache, or neurologic symptom.
Patients were discharged the day after the surgery.