Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Since VAT bears with it severe postopearive pain, and since ketamine has been shown to be an optimal analgesics adjuvant for postoperative pain, we wish to assess to effects of ketamie vs. lidocaine if put on the skin in the sites where scopes are interset into the chest for thoracoscopy.
Ketamine hydrochlorid is a general anesthetic that is also used as short term sedative.
Ketamine has an antagonistic effect on the central spinal N-Methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA)
receptors, the latter modulating pain stimuli generated peripherally on their way to central
pain centers.
Ketamine has been used recently pre-operatively rather than post-operatively. Our recent
experience with pre-operative use of ketamine has not been analyzed yet by Tel Aviv Medical
Center's researchers. However, there is some experience with topical dermal, epidural,
intra-articular and oral usage of ketamine.
As far as we no, there are no reports on patients' subjective feeling when ketamine was
given pre-operatively for postoperative acute pain in patients undergoing partial lung
resections. The possible influence of such an effect on the patient's well-being and the
patient's family feelings and reactions were neither explored.
The goal of the study is to examine the possibility that if ketamine is administered in the
pre-operative period, as a topical ointment, this will induce changes in the patient's
sensation of pain, his own satisfaction, and possibly his family's satisfaction as well. The
basis of this contention is that by administering less morphine (which is given to the
patient in the immediate post-operative period through PCA [Patient-Controlled Analgesia]),
with or without changes in pain, might have positive effects on the patient's well being and
his family's. This issue will be assessed by a verbal questionnaire and based and on a
visual analog scale (VAS).
Three groups of 20 patients each will be enrolled in the study. The first group will receive
a placebo topical paste which will be produced by the hospital pharmacy. The second group
will be given Lignocain paste, and the third group will get ketamine topical paste, prepared
by the pharmacy as well. The study will be double blind and randomized. All patients will be
treated with morphine postoperatively, as mentioned above.
It is anticipated that the amounts of morphine that will be used by the patients
postoperatively by patients treated by ketamine will be reduced as compared to the other
groups. This might increase the patient's and family's satisfaction rates, regardless of the
decrease in the subjective pain ratings.
The importance of this study is that if the contention that is at the basis of this study is
proven true, similar surgical groups of patients will benefit from the addition of topical
ketamine administration to the habitual morphine-used postoperative only analgesia. By doing
so, complications that stem from high doses of morphine will diminish, thus maintain
hemodynamic stability and benefiting from the advantages of a patient being awake,
cooperative and able to feedback the medical personnel in real time about his condition.
Cooperation and satisfaction of the patient and family could be the end result of this
process. Finally, it is assumed that under such conditions the number of complications in
the postoperative period will minimize as well.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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