Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

There has been a wide variety of use of anaesthetic agents along with adjuncts during subarachnoid block. The quest for attaining adequate analgesia and anaesthesia has always been shadowed by the concurrent deleterious effect of the anaesthetic agent. Ropivacaine as an anesthetic agent has proven to meet the desired goals of anaesthesia while minimizing the potential side effects. The addition of different adjuncts has shown to enhance the analgesic property, prolong the duration of sensory blockade and decrease the dose related adverse effects of the local anaesthetics. Fentanyl in this regards has also shown some promising effects. Thus we compare the use of ropivcaine as a single agent versus ropivacaine along with an adjunct (Fentanyl) to attain the desired anesthetic effect while minimizing the associated side effects.


Clinical Trial Description

Spinal anaesthesia has been a widely used mode of anaesthesia for lower abdominal and extremity surgeries. It blunts the "stress response" to surgery, decreases intraoperative blood loss, lowers the incidence of postoperative thromboembolic events, and decreases the morbidity in high-risk surgical patients. It serves as a useful method to extend analgesia into the postoperative period, where its use has been shown to provide better analgesia than parenteral opioids. In order to improve further and understand safety issues as well as the clinical use of spinal anesthesia, new local anesthetics and analgesic additives are being investigated for different application. With patient safety and comfort being the ultimate goal of any health practice, one must keep in mind about the side effects and related concerns of spinal anesthesia while achieving the desired level of anaesthesia and analgesia. Adequate anesthesia and analgesia during and post-surgery along with early ambulation and discharge seems to be the perfect recipe for the conduction of spinal anaesthesia in the current practice. Ropivacaine is one local anesthetic that could have the potential in this area. Ropivacaine is an amide local anesthetic with properties similar to bupivacaine producing similar sensory block at equipotent doses, but with a shorter duration of motor block. Thus, ropivacaine has a greater degree of motor sensory differentiation, which could be useful when motor blockade is undesirable. Ropivacaine blocks nerve fibers involved in pain transmission (A∂and C fibers) to a greater degree than those controlling motor function (Aβ fibers).Blockade of Aα and Aβ is slow and hence produces lesser motor blockade than bupivacaine. Though 40-50% less potent than bupivacaine, ropivacaine in an equipotent ratio of 1.5:1 produces results in a similar clinical profile with good preservation of motor function. Hence, its shorter duration, faster recovery of motor function, lower toxicity profile, and minimal hemodynamic alterations have been identified as a potential benefit for surgery of intermediate duration as well as for ambulatory surgery.

Though the use of bupivacaine is widespread, ropivacaine in the recent times has been used as a spinal anaesthetic agent and evaluated in many procedures because of its equivalent spinal anaesthetic effect and its lower risk of neurotoxicity and cardiotoxicity, compared with bupivacaine. In addition, there have been reports of fatal cardiovascular toxicity following use of bupivacaine in regional anesthesia.

Subarachnoid opioids with local anesthetics have become a well-accepted practice in spinal anesthesia for surgical procedures. Several combinations of local anesthetics such as lidocaine, bupivacaine, or ropivacaine, and opioids such as fentanyl have been reported for a variety of surgical procedures. The addition of small-dose fentanyl (10-25 μg) intrathecally to local anesthetics during spinal anesthesia has been shown to enhance duration of sensory analgesia.The addition of adjuvants to ropivacaine has shown to improve the quality of intra-operative and postoperative analgesia without compromising its benefits such as early mobilization and early voiding. Parlow et al. established the fact that hypobaricity influenced the extent of subarachnoid block and explained high cephalic levels of sensory block when fentanyl was added to isobaric local anesthetic solution. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04199013
Study type Interventional
Source Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, Institute Of Medicine.
Contact ABINASH D JOSHI, MBBS
Phone +9779841866963
Email abinash.d.joshi@gmail.com
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
Start date January 10, 2020
Completion date December 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05666479 - CGM Monitoring in T2DM Patients Undergoing Orthopaedic Replacement Surgery
Recruiting NCT05002387 - Diagnostic Knee Needle Arthroscopy in Predicting Unicompartmental Knee Osteoarthritis N/A
Recruiting NCT06080763 - Biomechanics and Clinical Outcomes in Responders and Non-Responders
Completed NCT03008967 - A Study of Patients Undergoing Total Knee and Hip Arthroplasty at a Regional Hospital in Denmark N/A
Withdrawn NCT02255877 - ZIPS Study - Zip Incision Approximation vs. STAPLE Phase 4
Completed NCT02642731 - Kidney Biomarkers of Acute Kidney Injury in Patients With Knee Arthroplasty N/A
Completed NCT02525588 - Polyethylene Wear Study on the Triathlon Total Knee Prosthesis N/A
Completed NCT01799772 - The Feasibility of a Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention in Patient Post TKA Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02520531 - Scorpio Posterior Stabilised (PS) vs Scorpio NRG ("Energize") PS - Total Knee Arthroplasty N/A
Completed NCT03183856 - Comparison of Ambulatory and Functional Improvement by Morning Walk N/A
Completed NCT03569397 - Music Therapy Versus Control for Total Knee Arthroplasty N/A
Terminated NCT02711592 - Pharmacogenomics Information in Enhancing Post-operative Total Joint Replacement Pain Management: a Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT03145493 - Effect of Suction Drains in Total Knee Arthroplasty With Tranexamic Acid N/A
Terminated NCT05602701 - Preoperative Prediction of Postoperative Physical Function
Recruiting NCT03570944 - Postoperative Outcomes Within an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Protocol (POWER2)
Withdrawn NCT02553122 - The Combined Efficacy of Evicel and Tranexamic Acid on Total Knee Arthroplasty Phase 3
Completed NCT02773537 - Motor-Sparing Peripheral Nerve Blockade Facilitates Mobility Post Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Randomized Controlled Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT02385383 - An Intravenous Iron Based Protocol for Preoperative Anaemia in Hip and Knee Surgery - An Observational Study N/A
Completed NCT02121392 - Epidural Catheter With or Without Adductor Canal Nerve Block for Postoperative Analgesia Following Total Knee Arthroplasty N/A
Terminated NCT02155712 - Triathlon Tritanium Knee Outcomes Study N/A