Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Postoperative Rehabilitation Following Total Knee Arthroplasty With Perineural Local Anesthetic Infusion
The purpose of this study is to determine if putting local anesthetic—or numbing medication—through a tiny tube next to the nerves that go to the knee will improve pain control during physical therapy, and ultimately improve the results of surgery. It will also determine if patients having knee replacement surgery may receive the same or better pain control at home compared with staying in the hospital, and if this improves their experience following surgery.
What procedures would be done as part of your normal clinical care (even if you did not
participate in this research)?
You will have some monitors placed (such as a blood-pressure cuff) and be given some
medicines through your intravenous (IV) line to make you very sleepy. The anesthesiologist
will then place a nerve block so that much of your knee (not all) will be numb. At the same
time, the anesthesiologist will place a tiny tube, called a catheter, near your nerves that
will be used after the surgery is over. You will still go to sleep for the surgery, but you
will be much more comfortable when you wake up because the numbing medicine will be working
to take away much of the pain. If you are not part of this study, you would go from the
recovery room to a room in the hospital for 3-5 days, and your catheter would be removed the
morning following surgery. After your catheter was removed, you would depend on oral and IV
opioids—or pain medicine—to control your surgical pain. You would go home with only oral
opioids since IV opioids cannot be provided at home.
What procedures will be done only because you are participating in this research study?
From the recovery room you will go to the Clinical Research Center (CRC) which is a special
part of the hospital where research is undertaken. During your stay at the CRC you will have
the ability to push a button on a small infusion pump to give yourself more medicine through
the tube to your nerves if you have pain. If this does not help enough, you will take pain
pills to help. And if this does not help enough, you will be given opioids (strong pain
medicine like morphine) into your IV. Each morning after surgery, the medicine in your
little infusion pump will be replaced by either (1) more medicine, or (2) salt water, or
"normal saline". The pharmacist will determine this randomly—like flipping a coin—and
neither you nor the doctors/nurses caring for you will know which you have. This is to keep
any of us from inadvertently/unconsciously affecting the results of the study. However, if
you have pain that is not controlled with pain pills, you will be switched back to the
regular medicine to improve your comfort until the following morning. You will undergo
physical therapy and following this you will be checked to see if you are ready to go home.
When you are ready to go home beginning on the third day after surgery, you may go home with
the little infusion pump and the tube that goes to the nerves of your knee. One of the study
physicians will call you each night to ensure that you are comfortable for the first 7
nights after your surgery, and you will be given the phone and pager numbers of a physician
available for you to contact 24 hours/day, 7 days/week. When the medicine runs out or in the
fourth evening following surgery, whichever comes first, your catheter will be removed. The
pump is disposable, so it can be thrown away. A physician will call you the two nights after
the catheter comes out to ensure that you are comfortable.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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