Pudendal Nerve Block Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ultrasound-guided Pudendal Nerve Block in Children: A Descriptive Study of Feasibility
Objective: Description of a new transperineal technique of pudendal nerve block (PNB), under
ultrasound-guidance.
Methods : Successive inclusions after parental consent of 60 children undergoing perineal
surgery under general anesthesia and pudendal nerve block. Data were collected from
induction of anesthesia to second post-operative day (24 hrs. after admission in recovery
room). Ease of PNB achievement was the primary objective evaluated. Efficiency in
preoperative and postoperative period was also reported.
After obtaining parental consent, children aged 1-15 years, physical status score I-III, requiring general anesthesia associated with bilateral pudendal nerve block (PNB) for elective perineal surgery in the investigators' paediatric surgery unit, were successively included. Exclusion criteria were any contraindication to general or loco regional anesthesia, and physical status score IV-V. Management of general anesthesia was standardized. Propofol and/or sevoflurane were used for induction, in association with a continuous infusion of remifentanil at 1µg/kg/min during two minutes. After this delay, airway control was assured through insertion of a tracheal tube or a laryngeal mask. Maintenance of anesthesia was then achieved with Sevoflurane (1.2 MAC) in a mix 02/N2 and remifentanil 0.05 µg/kg/min. Mechanical ventilation parameters were adapted to obtain a normal End-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2) (28-34 mmHg). Baseline values of blood pressure and heart rate under general anesthesia without nociceptive stimulation were measured.Ultrasound guided pudendal nerve block was then performed. For each block, data about sonographic identification of anatomical structures, visualization of needle and local anaesthetic spread were collected. The response to nerve stimulation, puncture complications and duration of the procedure were also noted. During perineal operative time, a rise up in blood pressure or in heart rate more than 20% compared to baseline values was considered as a PNB failure. Analgesia was then provided by an incremental increase of remifentanil, to obtain a return to baseline hemodynamic parameters. The maximum rate of infusion of remifentanil was collected. All patients received intravenous post-operative analgesia by acetaminophen 15 mg/kg and ketoprofen 1mg/kg. Rescue analgesia by IV nalbuphine 0.2 mg/kg was administered in recovery room if necessary. Post-operative analgesia by oral acetaminophen associated with ibuprofen, and rescue analgesia with oral tramadol were prescribed. Data on post-operative analgesia were collected up to 24h after recovery room admission. ;
Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT03973983 -
Comparison of Ultrasound-guided Transgluteal and Finger-guided Transvaginal Pudendal Nerve Block Techniques
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N/A |