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Foot Surgery clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05425979 Enrolling by invitation - Foot Surgery Clinical Trials

Mepivacaine Versus Bupivacaine Onset Time in Ultrasound-guided Ankle Blocks

Start date: March 11, 2024
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this research is to determine if both local anesthetics (mepivacaine and bupivacaine) are similar in their onset of sensory block to assess the efficiency of ultrasound-guided ankle blocks in our practice. Currently it is the standard of care to perform ankles blocks with both mepivacaine and bupivacaine. However, given similarity in their safety profile researchers would like to compare if one is non-inferior to the other in terms of onset time of ankle block.

NCT ID: NCT04872322 Enrolling by invitation - Foot Surgery Clinical Trials

Effect of Ropivacaine During Popliteal Nerve Block in Foot and Ankle Surgery

Start date: August 31, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

With the increasing rise of outpatient surgery in orthopaedic procedures, the management of immediate postoperative pain has been a major topic investigated, with the use of a peripheral nerve block in combination with general anesthesia being a commonly accepted method. Foot and ankle procedures, which offer the choice of several anesthetic techniques, have increasingly been performed with this method predominantly through the combination of general anesthesia with a single-injection popliteal nerve block to reduce the substantial acute postoperative pain that often requires large opioid intake within the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU). However, as a single-injection peripheral nerve block resolves off shortly following surgery, major postoperative pain, termed "rebound pain", can also arise, and has the potential to be even greater than that of patients who do not receive any peripheral nerve block with general anesthesia. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the contribution of ropivacaine concentration (0.5% versus 0.25%) of the initial bolus in continuous popliteal nerve blocks toward the rebound pain phenomena, or the quantifiable difference in pain experienced during the initial time after block resolution, in foot and ankle surgeries.

NCT ID: NCT04575688 Enrolling by invitation - Foot Surgery Clinical Trials

Periarticular Injection Versus Popliteal Block

PvP
Start date: July 13, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to determine the effectiveness and safety of two standard of care perioperative procedures for controlling pain following ankle and hindfoot osteotomy or fusion or ankle fracture repair.