Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this double blind, randomized study is to evaluate which rate and duration of infusion can be recommended for continuous perisciatic infusion of ropivacaine 2 mg/ml for analgesia after ambulatory foot surgery.


Clinical Trial Description

Protocol title:

Use of home pumps for analgesia after ambulatory foot surgery - comparison of two infusion rates SUMMARY in English

THE PURPOSE:

The purpose of this double blind, randomized study is to evaluate which rate and duration of infusion can be recommended for continuous perisciatic infusion of ropivacaine 2 mg/ml for analgesia after ambulatory foot surgery.

BACKGROUND:

In the previous study (1) we showed that the continuous perisciatic infusion of 2 mg/ml ropivacaine 5 ml/h for 55 hours provided better analgesia than placebo after ambulatory foot surgery. Similar results are reported by Singelyn (2), Ilfeld (3) and White (4). But, different pumps with different basal infusion rates were used in these studies. Singelyn used infusion rate of 7 ml/h for 48 hours, while Ilfeld used mechanical pump with adjustable infusion rate, starting with 8 ml/h and patient controlled analgesia (PCA) 2 ml/20 minutes for 2 postoperative days. In our and White's studies elastomeric pumps with reservoir of 500 ml and infusion rate of 5 ml/h were used in 55 hours. Capdevila (5) has shown that the patients prefer elastomeric pumps because they cause fewer problems. That is why it will be our choice as well.

The analgesic efficacy in our study was good as the patients in the treatment group had less pain and fewer sleep disturbances than in the placebo group. The question is whether higher infusion rate and longer duration would have an even better effect.

The aim of this study is to compare (in a double blind manner) two different regimens for continuous perisciatic nerve infusion of ropivacaine 2 mg/ml after ambulatory foot surgery:

1. elastomeric pump with reservoir of 275 ml, infusion rate of 5 ml/h (duration 55 hours) and

2. elastomeric pump with reservoir of 500 ml, infusion rate of 8 ml/h (duration 62 hours).

Design:

A randomized, double blind study with 40 ambulatory patients who will undergo foot or ankle surgery. These patients will be randomized to receive either regimen 1. (5 ml/h for 55 hours) or regimen 2. (8 ml/h for 62 hours). The randomization procedure: sequentially numbered, sealed, opaque envelopes that contain computer produced random numbers for treatment allocation. Blinding procedures: pre-numbered identical containers marked with "Test drug", date of production and infusion start/end will be provided by the registered nurse (SK). The patient and the acute pain nurse (EB), who will evaluate the effect of these two treatments, will be blinded.

On each of the 3 postoperative days the patients will be contacted by phone by the acute pain nurse and a standard questionnaire will be completed.

The primary effect variable is worst pain on the first postoperative day evaluated as VAS score. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00600899
Study type Interventional
Source Frederiksberg University Hospital
Contact
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase Phase 4
Start date September 2008
Completion date December 2010

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT04473196 - The Effect of Weight Bearing on Patient Outcomes Following 1st MTP Joint Fusion N/A
Recruiting NCT05587569 - Outcomes Following Combined Adductoplasty™ and Lapiplasty® (MTA3D) N/A
Recruiting NCT05555459 - Performance and Safety Evaluation of Inion CompressOn Screw in Foot and Ankle Surgeries. PMCF Investigation N/A
Completed NCT02121119 - Lidocaine Versus Bupivacaine in Ambulatory Continuous Block With Elastomeric Pump Phase 4
Completed NCT05579054 - Translation, Validity, and Reliability of the Foot Posture Index (FPI-6) - Turkish Version
Terminated NCT05082012 - Early Weight-Bearing After the Lapiplasty Mini-Incision Procedure (Mini3D) N/A
Recruiting NCT05051709 - Can Hypermobility of First Ray Affect Surgical Treatment of Hallux Valgus N/A
Recruiting NCT04716140 - Prospective Study: The Effect on Clinical Outcome After Treatment of MTP Cartilage Lesions in Hallux Valgus Surgery N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04145882 - Efficacy of Additional Osteotomies to Correct Hallux Valgus N/A
Completed NCT04468555 - Hallux Valgus Manual Therapy Based on Global Postural Reeducation. N/A
Terminated NCT03257540 - Early Weight-Bearing After Lapidus Arthrodesis
Completed NCT03846687 - Validation of Patient Reported Outcome Measures for Use in Hallux Valgus
Completed NCT04365712 - Osteotomy of the 1st Metatarsal for Hallux Valgus Using Pneumatic Oscillating Saw or Piezoelectric Scalpel N/A
Recruiting NCT02282956 - Ultrasound Guided Single Shot Block of Posterior Tibial Nerve for Postoperative Pain Relief After Hallux Valgus Surgery Phase 4
Withdrawn NCT01555216 - Continuous Tibial Nerve Block Versus Single Shot Tibial Nerve Block N/A
Completed NCT00683137 - Analgesic Efficacy And Safety of Valdecoxib For Treatment Of Post-Surgical Pain From Bunionectomy Surgery Phase 3
Terminated NCT04103814 - Effect of Topical CBD Cream for Degenerative Hallux Disorders Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT03423498 - The Toe-spread-out Exercise in Patients With Hallux Valgus and Without the Deformity N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06076655 - Hallux Valgus Treatment Developed for Children With Cerebral Palsy N/A
Recruiting NCT02915822 - COSMIC Study - Comparing Open Scarf/Akin Osteotomy and Minimally Invasive Chevron/Akin. A Feasibility Study N/A