Title of article :
Presternal local analgesia for postoperative pain relief after open heart surgery: a randomized, controlled study
Author/Authors :
mostafa, safya a. hamed assiut university - faculty of medicine - department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain management, Assiut, Egypt , kamel, emad z. assiut university - faculty of medicine - department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain management, Assiut, Egypt , seddik, mohammed i. assiut university - faculty of medicine - department of clinical pathology, Assiut, Egypt , shahin, ahmed s. assiut university - faculty of medicine - department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain management, Assiut, Egypt , ahmed, mohamed m. assiut university - faculty of medicine - department of cardiothoracic surgery, Assiut, Egypt
From page :
115
To page :
119
Abstract :
Infiltration of local anesthetics near the surgical wound has shown to improve early postoperative pain in various surgical procedures, especially after open heart surgery. Inadequate pain control reduces the capacity to cough, mobility, increases the frequency of atelectasis, and prolongs recovery. Patients and methods This study is designed to examine the efficacy of postoperative 1 g paracetamol/6 h, ketorolac tromethamine 30 mg/8–12 h as conventional analgesia versus bupivacaine plus magnesium sulfate through a single presternal catheter for postoperative pain relief after cardiac surgery. Forty patients were scheduled for valve replacement cardiac surgeries and were randomly assigned into two groups (20 patients in each group). Group M: each patient has received bupivacaine 0.125% with 5% magnesium sulfate through the presternal soft catheter at a fixed rate of 5 ml/h. Group B: each patient only has received postoperative 1 g paracetamol/6 h, ketorolac tromethamine 30 mg/8 h. For postoperative breakthrough pain, rescue analgesia in the form of 25 μg fentanyl was used, with recording of total required doses in both groups. Results The mean numeric pain scale was significantly lower in group M than in group B at most time points. The overall fentanyl requirements over the first 48 h were significantly lower in group M than in group B (33 ± 11.7 vs. 150 ± 1.6 μg, respectively). There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups regarding ICU stay and blood glucose level. Conclusion Local presternal bupivacaine with magnesium sulfate provided adequate postoperative analgesia and less opioid requirements.
Keywords :
bupivacaine , cardiac surgery , magnesium sulfate
Journal title :
Journal Of Current Medical Research an‎d Practice
Journal title :
Journal Of Current Medical Research an‎d Practice
Record number :
2678594
Link To Document :
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