Hyperalgesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessment of Efficacy and Safety of Continuous Wound Infiltration With Local Anesthesics Through a Parietal Paravertebral Catheter for Postoperative Analgesia After Posterior Lumbar Arthrodesis
Posterior lumbar arthrodesis causes severe postoperative pain, hampering patients's
postoperative reconvalescence especially functional rehabilitation. Efficient and safe
methods for postoperative analgesia are, therefore, mandatory. The application of opioids
are the most frequently used therapies for postoperative pain relief but it very often
results side effects. Local anesthetic wound infiltration is widely recognized as a useful
adjunct in a multimodal approach to postoperative pain management. In the setting of spine
surgery, a single bolus administration of a local anesthetic is a useful method (with a
reduction in parenteral morphine consumption during the 48 first hours) but has a limited
effect because of its short duration of action. Prolonged administration through a
multi-holed catheter positioned by the surgeon at the end of the procedure could increase
the duration of action and may thereby improve the efficacy of local wound infiltration.
Easy and effective, this new modality of administration has expanded the indications for
parietal infiltrations toward major painful procedures.
We designed this study to determine whether local anesthetic (compared with saline solution)
continuous wound infiltration during the first two days after posterior lumbar arthrodesis
on degenerative spine, could improve postoperative analgesia at short-term but particularly
at mid-term (two months) and long-term (six months), in order to decrease postoperative
lumbar pains (resulting in best life quality, opioid consumption limited and rehabilitation
hastened) and postoperative hyperalgesia areas. The postoperative analgesic and
antihyperalgesic efficacies; the postoperative rehabilitation at mid-term and long term, and
the safety of opioid administration and multi-holed parietal catheter will be compared in
the two groups (control and study).
Blockade of parietal nociceptive afferents by the use of continuous wound infiltration with
local anesthetics may be beneficial in a multimodal approach to postoperative pain
management after major surgery. The role of continuous wound parietal paravertebral
infiltration of ropivacaine for pain relief and postoperative rehabilitation after posterior
lumbar arthrodesis will be evaluated in a randomized, monocentric, double-blinded,
superiority controlled trial.
The general purpose of this clinical research is the assessment of efficacy and safety of
continuous wound infiltration with ropivacaine through a parietal paravertebral catheter for
postoperative analgesia, and his repercussions at mid (two months) and long (six
months)-term after posterior lumbar arthrodesis on degenerative spine.
The principal purpose concerns the assessment of postoperative analgesic efficacy at
mid-term (two months after surgery) of continuous wound infiltration with ropivacaine
(compared with saline solution), through a parietal paravertebral multi-holed catheter,
after posterior lumbar arthrodesis.
After obtaining written informed consents, the patients scheduled to undergo posterior
lumbar arthrodesis on degenerative spine,.will be randomly allocated to receive a continuous
wound infusion of either 0.2% ropivacaine (ropivacaine group A) or 0.9% saline (control
group B) when they will arrive in the operating room. The surgeon will perform a
standardized posterior median incision at the level of lumbar intervertebral instability.
Before putting retractors, he will infiltrate all surgical strata and the paraspinal muscles
all long the wound bilaterally with a solution of ropivacaine 0.5% 20 mL (group A) or with a
solution of 0,9% NaCl 20 ml (group B). At the end of surgery, a multi-holed wound catheter
will be placed by the surgeon, under direct visualization, in the paravertebral space ;
between the muscle fascia and subcutaneous tissues all along the wound, and fixed at the
skin by a stitch. The patients will be thereafter randomly assigned to receive through the
catheter either 0.2% ropivacaine (study group) (5-ml bolus followed by an infusion of 8 ml/h
during 48 h) or the same protocol with 0.9% NaCl (control group), thanks to a prefilled
elastomeric pump (400ml), set to deliver a 8-ml/h connected with the catheter. In addition,
all patients will receive patient-controlled intravenous morphine analgesia. After the
induction, the anaesthesist will install a peripheral venous catheter for each patient in
order to make blood samples easier (eight peroperative and two postoperative blood samples
for each patient, with the aim of ropivacaine pharmacokinetic study).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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