View clinical trials related to Total Hip Replacement Surgery.
Filter by:Patients are painful after total hip arthroplasty. These patients have significant co-morbidities. Analgesics cause significant side effects in this population. Locoregional analgesia is therefore an effective means of reducing the consumption of opioids in this surgery. The "gold standard" of locoregional analgesia after Total Hip Arthroplasty is the femoral block. However, a new technique has recently been described: the Quadratus Lumborum Block. The comparison of these two techniques is lacking in the literature. The comparison of the Quadratus Lumborum Block to the femoral block in Total Hip arthroplasty is important in the analgesic strategy of patients undergoing this surgery.
This study is being performed to measure the amount of the antibiotic ceftobiprole (study drug) found in the bone and blood after receiving one dose prior to your elective hip replacement surgery. A piece of your hip bone which will be removed as part of your surgery will be analyzed to determine how much ceftobiprole gets into the bone.