Postoperative Analgesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison Between Intrathecal Morphine and Quadratus Lumborum Block for Postpartum Analgesia of Elective Cesareans.
Postoperative pain of a caesarean section may be of high intensity, especially in the first
48 hours after the procedure, which affects the mother / newborn relationship, in addition to
having the potential to progress to chronic pain. The use of intrathecal morphine is
effective in post-caesarean analgesia, but carries unwanted side effects, including nausea,
vomiting, urinary retention and pruritus. Therefore, alternative techniques of analgesia
become necessary.
First described in 2007, ultrasound-guided quadratus lumborum (QL) block has gained
prominence due to its analgesic superiority to the TAP block. Besides providing somatic
analgesia, it also seems to inhibit visceral pain because the local anesthetic reaches the
paravertebral space, this was observed by magnetic resonance imaging with contrast medium
injected at the QL block site.
C-section is one of the most performed surgical procedures in the world, and presents great
potential for postoperative pain, especially in the first 48 hours. Pain in this period
represents a risk for evolution to chronic pain, but its incidence is still very divergent
when comparing the studies, ranging from 1% to 18%.
The use of intrathecal morphine (MIT) is consecrated as a first-choice method of analgesia
for post-partum cesarean delivery; however, its use carries relevant side effects for the
puerpera, such as pruritus, nausea, urinary retention and , more rarely, respiratory
depression. In the last decade, new adjunctive forms of postoperative analgesia have become
more popular, such as regional blockades, highlighting the blockage of the Transversus
Abdominis plane block (TAP) and the Quadratus Lumborum block (QL), taking as benefits the
prolonged analgesia they provide and the low incidence of side effects. Another factor that
contributes to the popularization of regional blocks is the increasing availability of
ultrasound devices in the anesthetic-surgical environment. Studies evaluating TAP block after
cesarean section performed under spinal anesthesia have shown a discrete benefit in
decreasing postoperative opioid consumption in addition to improving pain scores. When
comparing MIT with TAP block, the superiority of MIT is due to visceral analgesia while TAP
block is restricted to abdominal wall analgesia.
Ultrasound-guided Lumbar Quadrant blockade has gained prominence due to its analgesic
superiority over the TAP block, because in addition to providing somatic analgesia it also
seems to inhibit visceral pain since the local anesthetic reaches the paravertebral space,
this was observed by magnetic resonance imaging with contrast injected at the site of the QL
block.
Reviewing the literature in 2018, there are no clinical trials comparing the use of
intrathecal morphine with the quadratus lumborum block.
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