Complete Tear, Ankle and/or Foot Ligament Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of Ultrasound-Guided Popliteal Sciatic Nerve Blockade in the Severely and Morbidly Obese Populations
One technique for the nerve block involves injecting the numbing medicine where the nerve is together (higher up in the back of the thigh). The other technique involves injecting the numbing medicine where the nerve splits into two parts. By injecting numbing medication around the nerve(s), there will be less pain after the procedure. It is thought that the numbing medicine will be easier to inject in the group that the nerves are split. It is expected that subjects may need less pain medication and have lower pain ratings in this group too.
The purpose of this study is to compare two different techniques for placement of nerve
blocks for your foot or ankle procedure. A nerve block involves injecting numbing
medications around a nerve to decrease pain after surgery. An ultrasound machine is often
used to help see the nerve before injecting the numbing medicine. When an ultrasound machine
is used during a block it is called an ultrasound-guided block.
Many studies of ultrasound-guided nerve blocks have involved mostly thin patients,
especially from foreign countries. This study is different because the investigators are
looking at patients living in America with a body mass index (a measure of the amount of
body fat a person has) of more than 35.
The Sciatic nerve is a large nerve that provides most of the feeling and all of the movement
to the foot and ankle. The nerve travels under the back of the leg, and splits into two
smaller nerves slightly above the knee.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Not yet recruiting |
NCT01542840 -
Onset Time of Nerve Block: A Comparison of Two Injection Locations in Patients Having Lower Leg/ Foot Surgery
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N/A |