Arthritis Knee Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised, Observer Blinded, Controlled Trial Of Femoral Nerve Block Versus Local Infiltration Analgesia for Post Operative Analgesia Following Total Knee Arthroplasty
Pain after a knee replacement can impair recovery and use of the new knee. Having an injection to numb the femoral nerve is known to give good pain relief after the operation but may lead to slower mobilisation as it also prevents the patient from moving the knee. Recent studies have shown that infiltration of local anaesthetic (LIA) within the new knee joint may also give good pain relief. The null hypothesis is that there is no difference in primary or secondary outcome measures between femoral nerve block and LIA, as anaesthetic techniques for knee replacement.
Knee pain and stiffness is a common problem which can sometimes be improved by inserting a
replacement knee joint. An anaesthetist is a doctor who specialises in looking after patients
undergoing surgery, and there are a variety of different anaesthetics which can be used for
knee replacement surgery. These include general anaesthesia (going to sleep), and spinal or
epidural anaesthesia (where pain killers are injected into the back, resulting in temporarily
numb legs). Pain killers can also be injected around the nerves which supply the leg, or
around the site of the operation itself, combined with general or spinal anaesthesia if
required.
Over the years, multiple different combinations of these techniques have been tried. All have
advantages and disadvantages. Generally, those which completely numb the leg after the
operation often cause weakness which interferes with movement. Although the patient will have
no pain, getting up and around with the physiotherapist is crucial and the weakness can delay
recovery. However, excessive pain can also interfere with movement. There is therefore a
balance to be struck between pain and weakness, and the choice of anaesthetic technique is
key.
Researchers previously conducted a study at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital which
compared the effects of two techniques; the use of diamorphine in a spinal injection, and the
injection of pain killer around a nerve supplying the leg (femoral nerve block, FNB). Whilst
the research showed that FNB gave better pain relief, there are still concerns that it causes
weakness which may interfere with movement. A newer technique has evolved over recent years
in which pain killer is injected directly around the knee during the operation. This is known
as local infiltration analgesia (LIA) and the potential advantages are that it is simple,
safe and does not cause leg weakness.
If research shows that LIA provides adequate pain relief without weakness, it may be a better
option to use routinely, rather than FNB. The primary outcome measure is the amount of
morphine used in the first 48 hours. The secondary outcome measures are the Total Pain Relief
Score (TOTPAR), post operative pain scores, the ability to achieve set rehabilitation goals,
readiness for discharge and qualitative data on patient recovery and satisfaction.
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