Safety of Spinal Anesthesia in Patients With Tibial Shaft Fracture

NCT ID: NCT01795287

Last Updated: 2019-04-17

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2012-03-31

Study Completion Date

2020-06-30

Brief Summary

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There is a elevated risk of acute compartment syndrome (ACS) related to tibial shaft fractures due to oedema and reduced blood flow in traumatised tissues. This may lead to lack of oxygen and even necrosis. Symptoms of ACS are severe pain, hypoaesthesia, pain during flexion of the ankle and swollen leg in clinical examination. Paralysis and lack of distal pulses are late symptoms of ACS.

Many experts think that effective relief of pain caused by regional anaesthesia (RA) may hide the symptoms of the ACS. This may be incorrect. The evidence of dangers related to RA is based on old patient-series and single case-reports. Some of these studies report the symptoms of ACS (hypaesthesia and even pain) being caused by RA. Majority of the conclusions in these studies cannot be confirmed by an expert of RA. It is also possible that there are more hemodynamic changes related to general anaesthesia (GA) which may predispose to ACS. There are no modern, randomized and controlled studies of the safety of RA in patients with tibial shaft fracture.

Detailed Description

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For some of the patients RA may be even more safe than GA. According to a large meta-analysis RA reduces the risk of several complications versus GA.

* Risk of deep vein thrombosis is reduced by 44%
* Risk of pulmonary embolism is reduced by 55 %
* Risk of major bleeding is reduced by 50%
* Risk of post operative pneumonia is reduced by 39%
* Risk of post operative respiratory is reduced by 59%

It is generally thought that RA is safer than GA for example in patients with heart or pulmonary diseases. It is also known that the use of RA reduces postoperative need of opioids, which leads to improved respiratory function and reduced post operative disorientation, delirium and nausea.

Purpose of the study: Our purpose is to gain more information of the safety of RA in patients with tibial fracture. Our hypothesis is that RA is equally safe with GA.

Implementation: Research begins with a pilot study in which RA is compared with GA. There are about 65 tibial fractures operated in our centre every year. We randomize patients to GA group (n=25) and spinal anaesthesia group (n=25). We presume that RA is equally safe with GA. However, power analysis has been made presuming that RA will increase the risk of ACS. We calculated the sample size by assuming that the compartment pressure in RA group is 10 mmHg higher than in the GA group.

GA will be inducted by fentanyl, propofol and rocuronium. GA will be maintained by sevofluran, fentanyl and rocuronium. Spinal-anaesthesia will be performed by using hyperbaric bupivacaine. The dose is 10-15 mg, depending on the needs of the patient. This will maintain RA in lower extremities for 2-4 hours, which is enough to operate a tibial shaft fracture. In both study groups the post-operative pain will be treated by intravenous and peroral oxycodone and paracetamol.

Monitoring and ethics:

* Clinical examination every hour in recovery room (oedema, temperature, cutaneous sensation, distal pulses)
* Continuous pressure-measurement of anterior compartment in the operated leg for 24 hours
* Local oxygen metabolism measured by near-infrared spectroscopy in the operated leg for 24 hours

Patients will be monitored in the recovery room for 24 hours after operation. Blood tests (creatine kinase and myoglobin) will be drawn before operation, when arriving in recovery room, 6 hours and 24 hours after operation in each patient.

Conditions

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Tibial Fracture

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Spinal anesthesia

Spinal anesthesia

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

General anesthesia

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

GA will be inducted by fentanyl, propofol and rocuronium. GA will be maintained by sevofluran, fentanyl and rocuronium.

Spinal anesthesia

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

hyperbaric bupivacaine 10-15 mg i.t.

General anesthesia

General anesthesia with fentanyl, propofol and rocuronium and sevoflurane

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

General anesthesia

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

GA will be inducted by fentanyl, propofol and rocuronium. GA will be maintained by sevofluran, fentanyl and rocuronium.

Spinal anesthesia

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

hyperbaric bupivacaine 10-15 mg i.t.

Interventions

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General anesthesia

GA will be inducted by fentanyl, propofol and rocuronium. GA will be maintained by sevofluran, fentanyl and rocuronium.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Spinal anesthesia

hyperbaric bupivacaine 10-15 mg i.t.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

Patients with a unilateral tibial shaft fracture which needs to be operated are included.

Exclusion Criteria

* refusal of the patient
* severe, generalized atherosclerosis
* massive obesity
* marked mental retardation, dementia
* bilateral tibial shaft fracture
* polytrauma, such as head injury
* bleeding diathesis
* aortic stenosis
* infection at the injection site
* certain medications affecting bleeding
* sepsis
* hypovolemia
* conversion to general anaesthesia due to technical difficulties
* anesthesiologist has a strong opinion towards GA/RA
* foreign patient and marked translation difficulties
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Oulu

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Timo Kaakinen, MD, PhD

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Oulu University Hospital

Locations

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Oulu University Hospital

Oulu, , Finland

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Finland

Central Contacts

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Timo Kaakinen, MD, PhD

Role: CONTACT

+358405939190

Merja Vakkala, MD, PhD

Role: CONTACT

+358442915787

Facility Contacts

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Timo Kaakinen, MD, PhD

Role: primary

+358405939190

References

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Lehto PM, Vakkala MA, Lantto IP, Ohtonen P, Liisanantti JH, Kaakinen TI. Spinal Anaesthesia Versus General Anaesthesia for Patients With Tibia Shaft Fractures-A Randomized Controlled Study. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2025 Sep;69(8):e70111. doi: 10.1111/aas.70111.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 40792424 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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kaakinen001

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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