View clinical trials related to Erector Spinae Plane Block.
Filter by:Adequate analgesic regimen is one of the most important key elements of Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols. The cornerstone of analgesia is multimodal analgesia combining local anesthetic (LA) techniques and trying to avoid parenteral opioids and their side effects. Subcostal approach to Anterior quadratus lumborum block (SAQLB), compared to other variants of quadratus lumborum blocks (QLBs), was associated with wider and longer sensory blockade, and provided somatic as well as visceral analgesia of the abdomen. The newly emerging, relatively easy erector spinae plane block (ESPB) provided excellent analgesia across a variety of surgical procedures and reduced opioid consumption. This motivated us to do this study to assess and compare the analgesic efficacy of ESPB versus SAQLB following laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
There are different case studies about the use of erector spinae block (ESPB ) in nephrectomy, but there are no enough randomized controlled studies about it until now so it will be one of the earliest studies that investigate the effect of ESPB to relief acute postoperative pain in patients undergoing open nephrectomy. Although ESPB and thoracic epidural analgesia blocks successfully reduced postoperative opioid consumption in previous studies, no study has ever compared their efficacy in postoperative analgesia of adult patients undergoing open nephrectomy under general anesthesia thus in this randomized comparative study we are aiming to fill this gap in the literature. The aim of this study is to compare the analgesic effect of ultrasound-guided continuous erector spinae plane block versus thoracic epidural analgesia in open nephrectomy for renal cancer patients.
The aim of this research is to study and compare the efficacy and safety of single injection erector spinae plane block and thoracic paravertebral block in prevention of post herpetic neuralgia in patients with acute thoracic herpes zoster.
The purpose of this study is to assess efficacy of erector spinae plane block (ESP) for postoperative pain management in cardiac surgery patients.
Lumbar spinae stenosis surgery is a frequent intervention resulting in important postoperative pain. Management of this postoperative pain is thus important. Different pain management therapies exist. The erector spinae plane (ESP) block was described in 2016. It involves the injection of local anesthetics into the interfascial plane, deep to erector spinae muscle, allowing the blockade of the dorsal and ventral rami of the thoracic spinal nerves. It was initially proposed for analgesia of costal fractures, pulmonary lobectomy and thoracic vertebrae. The ESP block (ESPB) could probably be extended to a large number of surgical procedures. ESPB has so far not been investigated in lumbar spinae stenosis surgery.
The goal of this study is to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of bilateral erector spinae plane (ESP) blocks after lumbar and lumbo-sacral spine surgery by assessing postoperative pain scores and opiate requirements as the primary outcome measures. We are aiming to investigate how ESP blocks, performed under ultrasound guidance at the T12 vertebral level, contribute to postoperative pain control. This will be determined by measuring numerical rating pain scores repeatedly following surgery and opiate consumption until patient discharge from hospital. These primary outcome measures will be compared between a treatment group of participants, who will receive ESP blocks and a control group who will receive a sham block. Our primary hypothesis is that ESP blocks significantly reduce postoperative pain and opiate requirements
42 patients age of 20 to 85, (ASA) physical status I-III undergoing nephrectomy/NSS procedures via lumbotomy in 1st Department of Anesthesiology in Warsaw will be enrolled in the study. Patients will be randomised into 2 groups - patients from the first group will undergo General Anesthesia (GA) with intravenous analgesia peri-operatively, patients from the second group will receive GA plus the Erector Spinae Plane Block (ESP block) unilaterally performed under ultrasound guidance with catheter left on the side of surgery. Ultrasound transducer will be placed in a longitudinal orientation 3 cm lateral to the Th7 spinous process. Three muscles will be identified superficial to the hyperechogenic transverse process shadow as follows: trapezius, rhomboid major, and erector spinae. An 8-cm 18-gauge block needle will be inserted in a cephalad-to-caudad direction until the tip gets in the interfascial plane between rhomboid major and erector spinae muscles, as evidenced by visualization of local anesthetic spreading in a linear pattern between erector spinae and the bony acoustic shadows of the transverse processes. . Patients in this group will be anesthetized with 20ml 0,25% bupivacaine + Adrenaline 1:200 000 via interfascial catheter. ESP block will be performed at the level of Th7-8 after proper positioning he patient in the sitting position before GA then standard technique of catheter application will be applied. After the surgery the elastomeric pump will be attached to the catheter with 0,125% bupivacaine with Adrenaline 1:200 000. Anaesthesia will be standardised In the both groups.