Local Anesthesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A New Approach to Ilio-inguinal Nerve Blocks: 3-layer Injection vs Conventional Ultrasound-guided Single-shot Approach
Ilio-inguinal nerve blocks have a long history of efficacy in treatment of post-operative pain following inguinal surgery. Several anatomic studies have shown that the nerves supplying the inguinal area have a certain degree of variability with respect to their location between the internal and external oblique layers of the anterior abdominal wall. Furthermore, the standard single-shot approach to ilio-inguinal nerve blocks has a significant incidence of unintended femoral nerve block, which can impair patients' ability to walk after surgery. The investigators are proposing a new approach to the ilio-inguinal nerve block, which divides the total dose of local anesthetic into 3 equal parts, injecting each 1/3 into different layers of the anterior abdominal wall and sub-cutaneously. The investigators intend to show that this new technique, the Tsui approach, provides equal analgesia to the standard single-shot ultrasound-guided ilio-inguinal nerve block, while being faster to perform and having a lower incidence of unintended femoral nerve blockade. Patients under age 10 who are scheduled for elective inguinal surgery (hydrocele repair, orchidopexy, and inguinal hernia repair), who have already consented to an ilio-inguinal nerve block that is commonly placed for this type of procedure, will be approached to participate in this study. No increased risk is anticipated for these patients, as both ultrasound-guided and blind techniques are equally well-accepted in the literature for this type of block, and in addition there are few vascular or neural structures in this anatomical area (just medial and inferior to the anterior superior iliac spine) that may be damaged. Follow-up will be limited to an assessment of pain scores in the PACU post-operatively and any unintended femoral nerve blockade in post-PACU. This will not delay their hospital discharge as these are same-day surgery patients.
Project Summary Rationale - The conventional technique for performing an ilio-inguinal nerve
block involves a single shot of local anesthetic (usually 0.3 mL/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine) in
the transversus abdominis plane of the anterior abdominal wall. Using a blind technique (also
known as "fascial click"), a blunted needle (20 gauge) is placed 1 cm medial and 1 cm
inferior to the anterior superior iliac spine (ASIS), and directed downward perpendicular to
the skin surface until two distinct "pops" are felt, corresponding to the external and
internal oblique fascial layers. The entire volume of local anesthetic is then deposited in
this plane. Success with this technique ranges from 35-75% in the literature (1-3). Studies
have shown that volumes as low as 0.075 mL/kg of 0.25% levobupivacaine have provided equal
analgesia to 0.2 mL/kg for up to 4 hours post-operatively when ultrasound guidance is used to
ensure placement of local anesthetic near the ilio-inguinal and/or ilio-hypogastric nerves
(4), resulting in a 100% success rate for this block.
We are proposing a technique that will deliver 1/3 of the total dose of local anesthetic (0.3
mL/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine) for each layer of the lower anterior abdominal wall. Due to the
anatomic variability of the course of the ilio-inguinal and ilio-hypogastric nerves, we
believe that the placement of 0.1 mL/kg in each of the external oblique, internal oblique,
and transversus abdominis layers will improve the success of the "fascial click" approach
without the need for ultrasound guidance. In addition, the ilio-inguinal nerve block has a
known complication of unintended femoral nerve block. The incidence of femoral nerve block
varies from 4.5% to 9% (5); in fact, one randomized controlled trial of ilio-inguinal nerve
block for inguinal hernia repair in adults had to be stopped prior to completion due to
patient harm (falls, etc) from femoral nerve blockade (6). We propose that a 3-layer
technique will have a lower incidence of unintended femoral nerve block as compared to the
conventional single-shot technique.
For inguinal surgery (orchidopexy, inguinal hernia repair, or hydrocele repair), both the
ilio-inguinal and ilio-hypogastric nerves need to be blocked. The ilio-inguinal nerve arises
from L1 and follows the inguinal canal to innervate the medial aspect of the thigh, anterior
scrotum or labia. The ilio-hypogastric nerve has an anterior cutaneous branch the runs at the
level of the ASIS, providing innervation to the skin and subcutaneous tissues of the inguinal
region. For orchidopexy surgery, additional local anesthetic may be needed if the scrotal
incision is towards the apex of the scrotum (posterior - perineal nerve vs anterolateral -
genito-femoral nerve) rather than on the anterior aspect.
Study Goals and Objectives Primary Objective - To introduce a new technique of IHN/IIN blocks
that is equianalgesic to the single-shot technique without requiring ultrasound guidance.
Secondary Objective - To introduce a technique that has a lower incidence of unintended
femoral nerve block.
Study Design Randomized controlled trial comparing two groups: single-shot group (0.3 mL/kg
of 0.25% bupivacaine placed 1 cm medial to the ASIS following two "pops" via the fascial
click method), and the three-shot (TS) group, where 1/3 of the total dose above is deposited
in each of the 3 layers (external and internal oblique, transversus abdominis). In the TS
group, 0.1 mL/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine will be injected per layer.
Methods After IRB approval, ASA I-II children presenting for inguinal surgery (orchidopexy,
inguinal hernia, or hydrocele repair) whose parents have already given consent for an
ilio-inguinal nerve block, will be approached to participate in this study. Written informed
consent will be obtained from parents, while verbal assent will be obtained from children
where appropriate. Exclusion criteria include patient or parental refusal, local anesthetic
allergy, or contraindication to ilio-inguinal nerve block.
The ilio-inguinal nerve blocks will be performed by the attending anesthesiologist who is
responsible for the child's anesthetic. Each child will be premedicated with 20 mg/kg of oral
acetaminophen. Induction of anesthesia will be intravenous (propofol and remifentanil) or via
facemask (oxygen and sevoflurane) according to the discretion of the attending anesthetist.
Following placement of intravenous access and laryngeal mask airway, anesthesia will be
maintained with 1 MAC (minimum alveolar concentration) of sevoflurane in air/O2 with
spontaneous ventilation. Intraoperative monitoring will include heart rate,
electrocardiogram, oxygen saturation, non-invasive arterial blood pressure, and end-tidal
carbon dioxide, oxygen concentration, and anesthetic agent.
A SonoSite ultrasound unit (SonoSite M-Turbo, Bothell, WA, USA) and a SLAx 13-6 MHz linear
hockey stick probe will be used to document the placement of the local anesthetic and the
relevant anatomical structures. The study investigators will turn the screen away from the
attending anesthesiologist performing the block and will save 'before' and 'after' images of
the block onto a USB stick via the ultrasound machine. The attending anesthesiologist will
sterilize the area with chlorhexidine solution and locate the ASIS. Using a blunted 20 gauge
needle, they will place the needle approximately one finger's-breadth medial to the ASIS and
insert perpendicular to the skin until 2 pops are felt. If the patient has been randomized to
the single-shot group, following negative aspiration, all of the local anesthetic (0.3 mL/kg
of 0.25% bupivacaine) will be injected here. A screen shot of local anesthetic spread will
then be saved through the ultrasound machine onto a USB stick. If the patient has been
randomized to the three-shot (TS) group, following negative aspiration, one third of the
local anesthetic (0.1 mL/kg of 0.25% bupivacaine) will be injected here, then pulled back one
"pop" to the next layer where another third of the local anesthetic will be injected. The
final third of the local anesthetic dose will be injected subcutaneously in a skin wheal
medial to the ASIS. Again, a screen shot of local anesthetic spread will be saved via the
ultrasound machine to a USB stick. The USB stick will be password-protected using only
consecutive numbers to identify the patients. The investigator who will later review the
screen shots from the ultrasound will thus be blinded from patient allocation.
Following block placement, the surgeon may prep and drape the patient in preparation for the
surgical procedure. Baseline heart rate and arterial blood pressure will be noted following
skin incision. An increase in heart rate or arterial blood pressure greater than 20% from
baseline will be treated with rescue analgesia (fentanyl 1 mcg/kg IV). For orchidopexy,
additional local anesthetic (0.1 mL/kg 0.25% bupivacaine) will be used for local infiltration
of the scrotal incision.
Post-operatively, analgesia will be recorded by trained pediatric nurses in the
post-anesthetic care unit (PACU) using the FLACC pain scale for young children or non-verbal
patients, and using the Wong-Baker Faces Pain Score for older children. Both are rated on a
scale of 0-10. Any score greater than 6 will be treated with morphine 0.05 mg/kg IV, up to 2
doses, 15 minutes apart. PACU nurses will also note any quadriceps weakness, indicating an
unintended femoral nerve block. Following discharge from PACU, the patients will continue to
be monitored for pain scores in day surgery area for up to 4 hours post-operatively. No
follow-up is planned beyond discharge from day surgery.
Studies have shown that a blind, single shot technique for ilio-inguinal nerve blocks has a
success rate of 35-75% (1-3). For the purposes of our study, we will use a value of 60%
efficacy for the single-shot technique. We hypothesize that a 3-shot technique will have an
efficacy of 90%, based on studies showing 100% efficacy for single-shot ultrasound-guided
technique (4), and 94% efficacy in a similar study (7). For a power of 0.8, alpha 0.05, we
calculate a sample size of 32 patients per group.
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