Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary aim is to test the magnitude and duration of analgesia provided by single dose multi-drug analgesia administered for perianal block, and compare with standard solution (Marcaine & Lidocaine in 1:1 mixture - Total 60 ml), at post-operative period and also to compare with the standard solution including their respective post-operative opioid or non-opioid oral analgesic requirement. Local anesthesia via a perianal block using multi-drug analgesia or standard solution will be compared using the Numeric pain rating scale on Post-operative day 1, 3 and during follow up visit on day 7. The investigators hope to find a better control of post-operative analgesia which will lead to better functional outcomes. Possible decrease consumption of opioids in the post-operative period will perhaps decrease the cost and chances of addiction and will increase patient comfort and compliance.


Clinical Trial Description

Post-operative analgesia after anorectal surgery still poses a significant problem. Technical or operator dependent factors have been proposed for causing severe pain post operatively. Many factors such as height of anastomosis, incorporation of smooth muscle, size of doughnut, and inclusion of squamous epithelium were considered to cause pain specially after hemorrhoidectomy. However, in spite of standardizing the techniques, patients still experience moderate to severe pain after anorectal surgery. Effective post-surgical pain control is critical to patient recovery, and can contribute to improved healing, faster patient mobilization, reduced hospital stays and health care costs. Effective multimodal techniques have been devised to maximize pain relief, lower the risk of adverse events, and improve patient outcomes. These techniques (wound infiltration with local anesthetic being most common) is short lived, maximum up to 12 hours. Post-operative pain usually lasts for 72 hours and thus the systemic opioids remain the mainstay pain control post-operatively. Although effective analgesics, they are associated with unwanted and potentially adverse events, such as nausea, vomiting, pruritus, sedation, cognitive impairment, urinary retention, sleep disturbances, and respiratory depression. Also, narcotic addiction remains a concern for surgical patients. Some patients would like to have effective analgesia and thus also avoid narcotics.Multi-drug analgesic combinations are used in orthopedic surgery (Ropivacaine, Ketorolac, and Morphine, with adrenaline) and during hemorrhoidectomy (extended-release liposome Bupivacaine) which showed decrease in post-operative analgesia requirement. However, no studies that used multi-drug analgesia show any effect on the pain medication consumption after discharge for ambulatory surgery. The investigators have designed a novel multi-drug anesthetic formulation to achieve long-acting postoperative analgesia with single-dose administration intra-operative via perianal block and wound infiltration. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03105674
Study type Interventional
Source Columbia University
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 4
Start date May 1, 2017
Completion date December 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT06216223 - Laser Versus Surgery in Anal Diseases in Inflammatory Bowel Patients N/A
Withdrawn NCT02851940 - Pain and Bleeding Following Hypertonic Saline Sclerotherapy Compared to Brand Ligation for Symptomatic Hemorrhoids N/A
Recruiting NCT02301052 - Evaluation of Allium Ampeloprasum Spp.Iranicum Cream Effect for the Management of Hemorrhoids Symptoms Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02216305 - HAL-RAR Versus Hemorrhoidectomy in the Treatment of Grade III-IV Hemorrhoids. Prospective, Randomized Trial N/A
Completed NCT02358174 - Hemorrhoids and Metalloproteinases, Observational Study N/A
Completed NCT01483833 - Efficacy Study of Iferanserin to Treat Hemorrhoids Phase 2
Completed NCT00397137 - Stapled Anopexy Versus Closed Haemorrhoidectomy for Haemorrhoids N/A
Completed NCT00841620 - Symptom Control 1-year After Circular Stapler Anopexy or Diathermy Excision for Prolapsed Haemorhoids Phase 4
Completed NCT04276298 - Topical Analgesia Post-Haemorrhoidectomy Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT04675177 - Polidocanol Foam VS Artery Ligation in Hemorrhoidal Disease Phase 2/Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05889962 - Ultrasound-guided Pudendal Nerve Block for Pain After Hemorrhoidectomy N/A
Recruiting NCT01961739 - Topical 2% Lidocaine for the Treatment of Symptomatic Hemorrhoids Phase 2/Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT02061176 - THD Versus Open Haemorrhoidectomy N/A
Withdrawn NCT00512044 - Local Versus General Anaesthesia in Stapled Hemorrhoidectomy Phase 4
Completed NCT04031131 - The Use of Topical Anaesthetic in the Banding of Internal Haemorrhoids Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04329364 - RCT Comparing Conventional Haemorrhoidectomy With Laser Haemorrhoidoplasty Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT05247333 - Implementation of a Minor Ailment Service in Community Pharmacy Practice N/A
Completed NCT04567485 - Impact of Moderate to Severe Pain in the Post-intervention Monitoring Room After Hemorrhoidectomy on the Length of Stay in the Outpatient Surgery Unit
Completed NCT03298997 - Ligation and Hemorrhoidopexy Technique Versus Ligation of Hemorrhoidal Arteries Using Ultrasound for Hemorrhoids N/A
Completed NCT05605080 - Hemostatic and Analgesic Effect of Gel Foam and Gauze With Bosmin After Anal Surgery N/A