Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Stony Brook Children's Hospital, Stony Brook, New York, USA
Division of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Ann and Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2023 Jan;48(1):29-36. doi: 10.1136/rapm-2022-103823. Epub 2022 Sep 27.
Regional techniques are a key component of multimodal analgesia and help decrease opioid use perioperatively, but some techniques may not be suitable for all patients, such as those with spina bifida. We hypothesized peripheral regional catheters would reduce postoperative opioid use compared with no regional analgesia without increasing pain scores in pediatric patients with spina bifida undergoing major urological surgery.
A retrospective review of a multicenter database established for the study of enhanced recovery after surgery was performed of patients from 2009 to 2021 who underwent bladder augmentation or creation of catheterizable channels. Patients without spina bifida and those receiving epidural analgesia were excluded. Opioids were converted into morphine equivalents and normalized to patient weight.
158 patients with pediatric spina bifida from 7 centers were included, including 87 with and 71 without regional catheters. There were no differences in baseline patient factors. Anesthesia setup increased from median 40 min (IQR 34-51) for no regional to 64 min (IQR 40-97) for regional catheters (p<0.01). The regional catheter group had lower median intraoperative opioid usage (0.24 vs 0.80 mg/kg morphine equivalents, p<0.01) as well as lower in-hospital postoperative opioid usage (0.05 vs 0.23 mg/kg/day morphine equivalents, p<0.01). Pain scores were not higher in the regional catheters group.
Continuous regional analgesia following major urological surgery in children with spina bifida was associated with a 70% intraoperative and 78% postoperative reduction in opioids without higher pain scores. This approach should be considered for similar surgical interventions in this population.
NCT03245242.
区域技术是多模式镇痛的关键组成部分,有助于减少围手术期阿片类药物的使用,但某些技术可能并不适合所有患者,例如患有脊柱裂的患者。我们假设与没有区域镇痛相比,外周区域导管会减少接受主要泌尿外科手术的患有脊柱裂的儿科患者的术后阿片类药物使用,而不会增加疼痛评分。
对 2009 年至 2021 年期间接受膀胱扩大或可插管通道创建的患者进行了多中心手术恢复增强研究数据库的回顾性研究,这些患者没有脊柱裂且未接受硬膜外镇痛。排除接受硬膜外镇痛的患者。将阿片类药物转换为吗啡当量,并按患者体重归一化。
7 个中心的 158 例患有小儿脊柱裂的患者被纳入研究,其中 87 例患者有区域导管,71 例患者无区域导管。患者的基线因素无差异。无区域导管组的麻醉设置中位数从 40 分钟(IQR 34-51)增加到区域导管组的 64 分钟(IQR 40-97)(p<0.01)。区域导管组术中阿片类药物使用中位数较低(0.24 与 0.80mg/kg 吗啡当量,p<0.01),术后住院期间阿片类药物使用中位数也较低(0.05 与 0.23mg/kg/天吗啡当量,p<0.01)。区域导管组的疼痛评分并没有更高。
在患有脊柱裂的儿童中,主要泌尿外科手术后连续区域镇痛与术中阿片类药物减少 70%和术后减少 78%相关,而疼痛评分没有更高。在该人群中,这种方法应考虑用于类似的手术干预。
NCT03245242。