The Analgesic Efficacy of Periarticular Infiltration of Local Anaesthetic for Total Hip Replacement
Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2011-06-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Total hip replacement is a major surgical procedure usually associated with significant pain
in the early postoperative period. In our hospital, total hip replacement is routinely
performed under spinal anaesthesia with intrathecal bupivacaine local anaesthetic plus opioid
in the form of preservative free morphine. The use of 'local infiltration analgesia' as an
alternative postoperative analgesic technique has been investigated.In this technique the
surgeon infiltrates the surgical site with a long-acting local anaesthetic and places a
catheter under direct vision which remains in situ and is used to administer local
anaesthetic in the postoperative period until such time as it is removed (when no longer
deemed necessary for pain relief or at a pre-set time in the postoperative period e.g. 48
hours). We hypothesize that infiltration of the surgical site with peri- and intraarticular
levobupivacaine local anaesthetic would be an efficacious pain management technique and would
not be inferior to intrathecal morphine for postoperative pain management.
Phase:
Phase 4
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Cork University Hospital
Treatments:
Analgesics Anesthetics Anesthetics, Local Bupivacaine Levobupivacaine Morphine