Gall Stone Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Intraoperative Lidocaine Infusion vs. Esmolol Infusion for Postoperative Analgesia in Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy: a Randomized Clinical Trial
Comparison of intraoperative infusion of lidocaine and esmolol in the postoperative requirement of opioid for postoperative pain management after laparoscopic cholecystectomy to decrease opioid related side effects and enhance postoperative recovery with multimodal analgesia approach.
Postoperative pain after abdominal surgery includes many forms of distress, such as
spontaneous pain at rest; pain during movement, including that of respiration; and visceral
pain arising from damage to internal organs during surgery. Acute pain after laparoscopic
cholecystectomy is complex in nature. The pain pattern does not resemble pain after other
laparoscopic procedures, suggesting that analgesic treatment might be procedure specific and
multimodal. Three components have been described: incisional pain as dominant, visceral deep
pain, and shoulder referred pain. Opioids are most commonly used for postoperative analgesia
in laparoscopic cholecystectomy. However, they can be associated with many side effects and
delayed discharge. In addition, opioids do not offer the quality of postoperative pain relief
that one would expect, probably because of the pain specific to laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
A single agent is unlikely to treat all three types of pain. Therefore a multimodal approach
will be required.
Low-dose IV lidocaine is easy to administer, has well-established analgesic,
anti-hyperalgesic, and anti-inflammatory effects, and has minimal toxicity in commonly
studied doses (typically 1.5-3 mg/kg/h). Because postoperative pain is to a large extent an
inflammatory phenomenon, administration of systemic local anesthetics, which have
inflammatory modulatory properties, could significantly reduce pain and therefore allow more
rapid discharge. Lidocaine has an excellent safety record when administered by low-dose
infusion. In addition, intravenous lidocaine is an effective modality for treating visceral
pain.
Esmolol has been proposed as an alternative to intraoperative use of opioids, and found to
facilitate the fast-tracking process and speed home-readiness of patients undergoing
outpatient surgery. The various mechanisms of opioids dose sparing with concomitant use of
β-adrenergic antagonist have been proposed from time to time such as suppression of stress
hormones and pro-inflammatory cytokines, alteration of hepatic drug metabolism, activation of
G-coupled proteins in cell membrane, central analgesia and so on but nothing conclusive has
been established as yet.
After pre operative evaluation, patients will be premedicated with oral diazepam (0.1-0.2
mg/kg) at the night before and 2 hours before surgery. Informed consent will be obtained from
all patients. Patients will be instructed during pre-anaesthetic visit about the use of the
visual analogue scale (0-10 cm) where 0 is no pain and 10 is worst imaginable excruciating
pain. They will also be informed that they will be asked their pain (VAS score) with its
character during first 24 hrs after the surgery.
Both the patient and the investigator observing the outcome will be blinded about assignment
of patient group during the study. The investigator will not enter the operating room but
will be responsible for data collection in post operative period and data analysis. On
arrival of patients in the preoperative holding area, they will be randomly assigned into any
of two groups using computer generated random number. Details of group assignment and case
number will be kept in a set of sealed opaque envelope. The anesthesia staff will open the
envelope and prepare drugs accordingly. The attending anesthesiologist will not be involved
in the data collection and analysis, and will follow the standard general anaesthesia
protocol during the study.
On arrival to operating room, standard monitoring will be established and baseline heart
rate, non-invasive B.P, oxygen saturation and bispectral index (BIS) value (Covidien) will be
recorded. A peripheral vein will be cannulated for administration of IV fluid with 18 G
cannula Patient will be preoxygenated using 100% oxygen for 3 minutes.
General anesthesia will be induced with IV fentanyl 1.5 µg/kg , propofol 2-2.5 mg/kg till
cessation of verbal response and tracheal intubation facilitated with vecuronium 0.1mg/kg IV.
The lungs will be mechanically ventilated with a 50% mixture of air in oxygen to maintain
ETCO2 between 35 to 45 mm of Hg. At induction, lidocaine group (L group) patients will
receive 1.5 mg/kg of lidocaine IV bolus. The lidocaine infusion (B-Braun) of 1.5 mg/kg/h will
be started immediately after induction of anesthesia. The esmolol group (E group) will
receive an IV bolus 0.5 mg/kg at induction followed by continuous infusion (B-Braun) of
esmolol (5-15 μg/kg/min) and titrated to maintain the heart rate within 25% of the baseline
value. Inj. paracetamol 1 gm IV infusion will be started after induction and given over 15
min.
Anesthesia will be maintained in all groups with isoflurane adjusted upto 2.5% to maintain
MAP within 20% of baseline and BIS value between 50 to 60. An orogastric tube will be
inserted in every patient before surgical incision. No supplemental opioids will be used
during surgery. Supplemental neuromuscular blockade will be achieved with vecuronium IV bolus
doses after observing curare notch in capnometry. Inj. ketorolac 30 mg IV and ondansetron 4mg
(0.1mg/kg) IV will be given after removal of gall bladder. Any episode of intraoperative
hypotension (MAP lower than 65 mm Hg) and bradycardia (heart rate < 50 bpm) will be treated
with ephedrine 5 mg and atropine 0.4 mg IV respectively.
Patient position and monitoring
Hasson surgical technique will be used. Each port site will be infiltrated with 3ml of 2%
lidocaine before incision. Pneumoperitoneum will be achieved with carbon dioxide. Patients
will be positioned in 30 degrees reverse trendelenburg position and tilted toward the left
slowly. Non-invasive blood pressure assessment, oximetry, ECG and end tidal CO2 will be
continually monitored during the anesthesia. During pneumoperitoneum, controlled ventilation
will be adjusted to maintain ETC02 between 35 to 45 mm of Hg. Intra-abdominal pressure will
be kept below 15 mm of Hg during laparoscopy.
At the end of surgery, patients will be returned to a supine position and the carbon dioxide
left in the peritoneal cavity will be expelled by slow abdominal decompression. Isoflurane
will be discontinued after the last skin suture, and the lignocaine or esmolol infusions will
also be stopped at completion of surgery. 10 ml of 0.25% Bupivacaine will be infiltrated in
the incision site.
Residual neuromuscular block will be reversed with neostigmine 0.05 mg/kg IV and
glycopyrrolate 0.01 mg/kg IV. Thorough gastric and oropharyngeal suctioning will be done.
Then, orogastric tube will be removed before endotracheal extubation. Trachea will be
extubated on the operating table. Then, the patient will be transferred to the postanesthesia
care unit.
Postoperative Care and observation In PACU, non-invasive blood pressure, heart rate,
respiration, and temperature will be monitored by nurses unaware of the study. Pain at
awakening will be noted using VAS scale. Pain including its character will be assessed at
rest and on movement by a VAS every 30 min by the investigator and by nurses on SOS basis on
patient's request. If the VAS for pain is more than 3 at rest, morphine 1 mg IV and Tramadol
50 mg IV will be administered in PACU and in ward respectively and repeated on SOS basis. It
will be stopped if any adverse effects noticed which will include increased sleepiness,
respiratory depression (SPO2 < 90%, R.R < 8 per minute). Metoclopramide 10 mg IV will be
administered for grade 3 & 4 PONV.
In the investigators institution, no step-down high dependency unit is available and patients
will be transferred to ward directly from the PACU and following outcome parameters will be
observed at 2, 6, 8, 12 and 24 h after surgery.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT02136095 -
Promising Initial Experience With Intra-operative Fluorescent Cholangiography
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT02568852 -
Comparison of Coagulation Factors During Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01103570 -
Cholecyst- Versus Cystic Duct Cholangiography During Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT02317510 -
Combined Spinal Epidural Anesthesia and General Anesthesia for Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
|
N/A |