Title of article :
Efficacy of wound infiltration with lornoxicam for postoperative analgesia following thyroidectomy: a prospective, randomized, double-blind study
Author/Authors :
KILBAŞ, Zafer Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , MENTEŞ, Mustafa Öner Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , HARLAK, Ali Gulhane Military Medical Faculty - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , YİĞİT, Taner Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , BALKAN, Salih Müjdat Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , COŞAR, Ahmet Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of Anesthesiology, Turkey , ÖZTÜRK, Erkan Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , KOZAK, Orhan Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey , TUFAN, Cemil Turgut Gülhane School of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Turkey
Abstract :
Background/aim: Postoperative pain control constitutes a major problem and studies have focused on reducing opioid requirements using regional techniques. We aimed to investigate the efficacy of wound infiltration with lornoxicam on postoperative pain control following thyroidectomy. Materials and methods: In this prospective, randomized-controlled study, 80 patients scheduled for thyroidectomy were randomly assigned to 2 groups. After the thyroidectomy was performed, patients in group I underwent wound infiltration with 4 mg of lornoxicam and patients in group II received the same amount of saline. Rescue analgesia was provided with additional doses of lornoxicam delivered by an on-demand patient-controlled analgesia device. Total analgesic consumption during the postoperative 24 h, and pain intensities assessed using a visual analog scale score at 0, 2, 4, 8, 12 and 24 h postoperatively were recorded. Results: Pain scores during the postoperative 24 h were slightly lower in group I than in group II, but the difference was not significant (P 0.05). The mean analgesic consumption was 8.87 ± 1.87 mg and 10.33 ± 1.25 mg in groups I and II, respectively (P 0.05). Conclusion: Wound infiltration with lornoxicam neither improved postoperative pain control nor decreased total analgesic consumption.
Keywords :
Wound infiltration , lornoxicam , postoperative pain , thyroidectomy