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头皮阻滞在开颅术中的随机对照试验的系统评价和荟萃分析。

Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials for Scalp Block in Craniotomy.

机构信息

Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Hamilton General Hospital, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada.

Department of Health, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

Neurosurgery. 2023 Jul 1;93(1):4-23. doi: 10.1227/neu.0000000000002381. Epub 2023 Feb 10.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Scalp block is regional anesthetic injection along nerves innervating the cranium. Scalp blocks for craniotomy may decrease postoperative pain and opioid consumption. Benefits may extend beyond the anesthetic period.

OBJECTIVE

To analyze evidence for scalp block on postoperative pain and opioid use.

METHODS

This systematic review and meta-analysis, Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews registration (CRD42022308048), included Ovid Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online, Embase, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials inception through February 9, 2022. Only randomized controlled trials were included. We excluded studies not reporting either main outcome. Duplicate reviewers performed study selection, risk of bias assessment, data extraction, and evidence certainty Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation appraisal. Main outcomes were postoperative pain by visual analog scale within 72 hours and opioid consumption as morphine milligram equivalent (MME) within 48 hours.

RESULTS

Screening filtered 955 studies to 23 trials containing 1532 patients. Risk of bias was overall low. Scalp block reduced postoperative pain at 2 through 72 hours, visual analog scale mean differences of 0.79 to 1.40. Opioid requirements were reduced at 24 hours by 16.52 MME and 48 hours by 15.63 MME.

CONCLUSION

Scalp block reduces postoperative pain at 2 through 48 hours and may reduce pain at 72 hours. Scalp block likely reduces opioid consumption within 24 hours and may reduce opioid consumption to 48 hours. The clinical utility of these differences should be interpreted within the context of modest absolute reductions, overall care optimization, and patient populations. This is the first level 1A evidence to evaluate scalp block efficacy in craniotomy.

摘要

背景

头皮阻滞是沿支配颅骨的神经进行的区域麻醉注射。头皮阻滞用于开颅术可能会减少术后疼痛和阿片类药物的使用。其益处可能会超出麻醉期。

目的

分析头皮阻滞对术后疼痛和阿片类药物使用的影响。

方法

本系统评价和荟萃分析,前瞻性注册系统评价(CRD42022308048),包括 Ovid 医学文献分析和检索系统在线、Embase 和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库,从 2022 年 2 月 9 日开始。仅纳入随机对照试验。我们排除了未报告主要结局的研究。重复审查员进行了研究选择、偏倚风险评估、数据提取以及证据确定性分级的评估。主要结局是术后 72 小时内的视觉模拟评分(VAS)疼痛和术后 48 小时内的吗啡毫克当量(MME)阿片类药物消耗量。

结果

筛选出 955 篇研究,纳入了 23 项试验,共包含 1532 名患者。整体偏倚风险较低。头皮阻滞降低了术后 2 至 72 小时的疼痛,VAS 平均差值为 0.79 至 1.40。头皮阻滞在 24 小时减少了 16.52 MME 的阿片类药物需求,在 48 小时减少了 15.63 MME 的阿片类药物需求。

结论

头皮阻滞可降低术后 2 至 48 小时的疼痛,并可能降低 72 小时的疼痛。头皮阻滞可能会降低术后 24 小时内的阿片类药物消耗,并可能将阿片类药物消耗降低至 48 小时。在适度的绝对减少、整体护理优化和患者人群背景下,应考虑这些差异的临床实用性。这是第一项评估头皮阻滞在开颅术中疗效的 1A 级证据。

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