Effect of Peripheral Nerve Blocks as anesthetic adjuvant with Spinal versus General anesthesia on pain control and early postoperative discharge | ||||
SVU-International Journal of Medical Sciences | ||||
Article 79, Volume 8, Issue 1, January 2025, Page 884-894 PDF (393.07 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original research articles | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/svuijm.2023.232739.1671 | ||||
![]() | ||||
Authors | ||||
Gad Sayed Gad; Almoutasem Gaafer Ahmed Esmail ![]() | ||||
Department of Anesthesia, ICU, and Pain Management, Faculty of Medicine, South Valley University, Qena 83523, Egypt | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Background: Spinal anesthesia may cause many side effects. Augmenting it with Peripheral nerve blocks reduce opioid use. Proficient neuroaxial blocks may cause hyperalgesia. Pain relief and recovery are improved with peripheral nerve blocks. Objectives: To assess peripheral nerve blocks impact with spinal compared to with general anesthesia on sever post operative pain and early discharge. Patients and methods: This randomized trial divided 60 foot and ankle surgery patients into two groups: A: spinal anesthesia with Popliteal PNBs, B: general. Ages 20-55, ASA 1 or 2, 1-3 hour surgeries. Age >55, allergies, ASA 3 or 4, pregnancy/breastfeeding excluded. History, examinations, lab tests, anesthetic, surgical records. The ethical clearance number is SVU-MED-AIP029-1-22-9-454. Main outcomes: VAS score, opioid usage; secondary outcomes: hospital stay, nausea/vomiting, PACU discharge time. Results: Group A: mean age: 44.6±7.03 years, 53.3% male. In Group B, mean age: 46.27±8.18 years, 66.7% male. Non-significant gender or age differences (p>0.05). Surgical kinds similar (p>0.05). ASAII classification higher in Group A (86.7% vs. 53.3%, p=0.005). No significant VAS score differences at 4, 8, 12, and 24 hours (p>0.05). Group A (1.33±0.48 days, 20% opioids) and Group B (1.43±0.73 days, 6.7% opioids) had comparable hospital stays (p>0.05). On average, Group A discharged at 55.53±5.26 minutes with no nausea or vomiting occurrence, whereas Group B discharged at 32.60±3.34 minutes but, 93.3% of cases reported nausea or vomiting. The average PACU discharge time was 44.07±12.36 minutes (range 28-66 minutes). Conclusion: general anesthesia led to faster PACU discharge but not overall discharge, lower postoperative pain levels, suggesting both approaches are viable for foot and ankle surgery. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Peripheral Nerve Blocks; Spinal anesthesia; General anesthesia; Postoperative discharge | ||||
Statistics Article View: 91 PDF Download: 50 |
||||