Laparoscopic Surgical Procedures Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of Bupivacaine Infusion in Abdominal Surgery
The incisions used in abdominal surgery can be quite painful, requiring strong pain
medications. A new pain pump that trickles small amounts of local freezing into the incision
has been developed that helps numb the area so that the patient does not feel the pain for
two to five days after surgery.
The main research question is whether use of the pain pump will result in decreased hospital
length of stay. The research is important because if the pain pump is found to be effective,
it can substantially decrease the length of stay. Areas to be studied include hospital
length of stay, patient's comfort post-operatively, and post-operative complications.
Pain in the post-operative period has been a limiting factor delaying recovery following
abdominal surgery. Furthermore, it has been associated with several complications including
ileus, urinary retention, delay to tolerating oral intake and enteral feeds, thrombo-embolic
complications, and respiratory complications such as atelectasis and pneumonia. Diminishing
pain in the post-operative period has been a subject of great study and to date the role of
epidural analgesia, epidural anesthesia, patient controlled anesthesia and narcotic
analgesia has been well documented to assist in controlling pain, decreasing morbidity and
accelerating recovery in the post-operative period following colorectal surgery.
Nevertheless, the use of opioid-based analgesic techniques via epidural, nurse or patient
controlled delivery systems either oral or parenteral can produce adverse effects such as
nausea, vomiting, ileus, delay in tolerance or urinary retention. Concomitant use of
non-narcotic based analgesics have failed to obviate the need for narcotic based analgesia.
Recently, several companies have developed devices that deliver a constant rate of local
anesthetic via a spring loaded device through a multiport catheter inserted into the
incision. The effectiveness of these bupivicaine infusion pumps has been demonstrated to
diminish post-operative pain following orthopedic, plastic, thoracic and cardiac surgeries
but to date their role has not been evaluated in colorectal surgery or abdominal surgery.
The rational of the study is that bupivicaine infusion pumps are being used at St. Joseph's
Healthcare for patients undergoing laparoscopic assisted colorectal surgery, and
anecdotally, the patients have less pain, need less narcotics and can ambulate and be
discharged sooner. This pilot study aims to gather prospective randomized data regarding
post-operative length of stay and patient pain scores so that a properly powered
randomization study can be undertaken to understand if the bupivicaine infusion system helps
decrease length of stay and patient's post-operative pain.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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