From the Department of Anesthesia, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Anesthesia, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Anesth Analg. 2019 Mar;128(3):426-437. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000002599.
Local infiltration analgesia offers effective postoperative analgesia after knee arthroplasty, but the role of its counterpart, local instillation analgesia (LIA), in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) is unclear. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the analgesic benefits of LIA for outpatient ACLR.
We sought randomized controlled trials investigating the analgesic effects of LIA versus control in adults having outpatient ACLR and receiving multimodal analgesia (excluding nerve blocks, which are examined in parts I and II of this project). Cumulative postoperative analgesic consumption at 24 hours was designated as a primary outcome. Analgesic consumption during postanesthesia care unit stay, proportion of patients requiring analgesic supplementation, time-to-first analgesic request, rest pain scores during the first 48 hours, hospital length of stay, and incidence of opioid-related side effects were analyzed as secondary outcomes and pooled using random effects modeling.
Eleven randomized controlled trials (515 patients) were included. Analgesic consumption was selected as the primary outcome in 4 trials (36%). Compared to control, LIA reduced the 24-hour morphine consumption by a weighted mean difference (95% confidence interval) of -18.0 mg (-33.4 to -2.6) (P = .02). LIA reduced postanesthesia care unit morphine consumption by -55.9 mg (-88.4 to -23.4) (P < .05) and decreased the odds (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]) of analgesic supplementation during the first 24 hours by 0.4 (0.2-0.8) (P = .004). LIA also improved pain scores during the 0-24-hour interval, most notably at 4 hours (-1.6 [-2.2 to -1.0) (P < .00001).
Administering LIA for outpatient ACLR improves postoperative analgesia by decreasing opioid consumption and improving pain control up to 24 hours, with minimal complications. These findings encourage integrating LIA into the care standard for ACLR. Questions regarding the ideal LIA components, location, and role in the setting of hamstring grafts require further research.
局部浸润镇痛在膝关节置换术后提供有效的术后镇痛,但局部灌注镇痛(LIA)在前交叉韧带重建(ACLR)中的作用尚不清楚。本系统评价和荟萃分析评估了 LIA 用于门诊 ACLR 的镇痛益处。
我们检索了调查 LIA 与对照在接受多模式镇痛(不包括神经阻滞,这在本项目的第一和第二部分进行了检查)的成人门诊 ACLR 中镇痛效果的随机对照试验。24 小时内累积术后镇痛消耗被指定为主要结局。在麻醉后护理病房停留期间的镇痛消耗、需要镇痛补充的患者比例、首次镇痛请求时间、前 48 小时内休息疼痛评分、住院时间和阿片类药物相关副作用的发生率被分析为次要结局,并使用随机效应模型进行汇总。
纳入了 11 项随机对照试验(515 名患者)。4 项试验(36%)选择了镇痛消耗作为主要结局。与对照组相比,LIA 减少了 24 小时吗啡消耗的加权平均差异(95%置信区间)为 -18.0 毫克(-33.4 至 -2.6)(P =.02)。LIA 减少了麻醉后护理病房吗啡消耗的 -55.9 毫克(-88.4 至 -23.4)(P <.05),并降低了前 24 小时内镇痛补充的几率(比值比[95%置信区间])0.4(0.2-0.8)(P =.004)。LIA 还改善了 0-24 小时期间的疼痛评分,在 4 小时时最为显著(-1.6 [-2.2 至 -1.0](P <.00001)。
在门诊 ACLR 中给予 LIA 通过减少阿片类药物消耗和改善 24 小时内的疼痛控制来改善术后镇痛,并发症最小。这些发现鼓励将 LIA 纳入 ACLR 的护理标准。关于理想的 LIA 成分、位置以及在腘绳肌腱移植物中的作用的问题需要进一步研究。