Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ropivacaine Plasma Concentrations After Fascial Blocks in Elective Cardio-thoracic and Abdominal Surgery: an Observational, Monocentric Study
Primary aim: observe the incidence of systemic toxicity from local anesthetic (LAST) after performing fascial blocks in patients undergoing elective cardio-thoracic and abdominal surgery. Secondary aim: describe the pharmacokinetic profile of the local anesthetic (ropivacaine) and assess peri-procedural complications, post-operative pain and opiate consumption in the first 24 hours.
Loco-regional anesthesia (LRA) procedures have acquired, in recent years, increasing importance in the peri-operative control of pain in the field of cardio-thoracic and abdominal surgery. To date, they are recognized as part of the multimodal analgesia underlying the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols as they have demonstrated a better efficacy in post-operative pain control than the use of opiates alone and allow a significant reduction in the use of opioids in the postoperative period. The advent of ultrasound-guided LRA procedures has led to the development of numerous fascial blocks, which involve the injection, at the level of the muscle-fascial planes, of an abundant volume of low-concentration local anesthetic to allow spread to adjacent nerve structures. The fascial blocks represent a valid alternative to epidural analgesia for the control of postoperative pain in the thoracoabdominal area, as they are characterized by a rapid learning curve and a lower risk of periprocedural complications compared to neuraxial anesthesia procedures. The main chest wall nerve blocks used in clinical practice include the pectoral nerve block (PECS1 and PECS2) and serrate anterior plane block (SAP) at the level of the anterior chest wall; the spinal erector plane (ESP) block and the paravertebral block at the level of the posterior thoracic wall. LRA techniques also play a fundamental role in the field of abdominal surgery, especially in the context of multimodal analgesia, aiming to reduce consumption and, consequently, the secondary side effects of the use of opioids. In the case of laparotomic major abdominal surgery, the use of epidural analgesia has been shown to be effective in reducing post-operative pain, opioid consumption, and recovery of gastrointestinal function, but has not shown a significant reduction in the duration of hospitalization and of post-operative complications. Subarachnoid analgesia is mainly indicated in laparoscopic abdominal surgery. Numerous studies have shown an efficacy similar to epidural anesthesia in controlling pain and reducing opioid consumption as well as allowing early patient mobilization and a shorter length of hospital stay. The transverse abdominal plane (TAP) block has a rapid learning curve and has been shown to be effective in controlling postoperative analgesia, reducing opioids consumption and reducing hospital stay. The lumbar square (QoL) block has a greater efficacy than other abdominal wall blocks on the visceral component of pain. A recent meta-analysis demonstrated greater efficacy than TAP in the control of post-operative pain and guarantees a longer duration of analgesia. The effectiveness of the anesthetic depends on its local action at the level of the nervous structures "wetted" by the drug; a variable amount of local anesthetic undergoes systemic absorption and might be responsible for part of the analgesic effect, but above all for the possible appearance of systemic side effects.10 The amount of drug redistributing in the blood depends on the total dose of the drug administered, the route of administration, and the vascularity of the injection site. Ropivacaine is a long-acting amide local anesthetic frequently used in LRA procedures. Unlike other drugs of the same family, the levorotatory enantiomer S-Ropivacaine is characterized by reduced lipophilicity and this determines a lower risk of toxicity to the Central Nervous System (CNS) and cardiovascular system (CVS). The drug exhibits high plasma protein binding (α1-acid glycoprotein), linear absorption kinetics, hepatic metabolism, and renal elimination. Systemic toxicity from Local anesthetic (LAST) represents a complication of local anesthetic administration and is directly dependent on the plasma concentration of the drug. The signs and symptoms of LAST occur progressively and mainly affect the CNS (visual disturbances, perioral hypoaesthesia, dizziness, euphoria, muscle stiffness, spasms, convulsions) and the CVS system (hypotension, bradycardia, arrhythmias, cardiac arrest). The study aims to observe the onset of local anesthetic toxicity (LAST) after performing fascial blocks in patients undergoing elective cardiothoracic and abdominal surgery. ;
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