Does it Worth to Reinforce With Additional Anesthesia to Improve Postoperative Course After Orthognathic Surgery?
NCT ID: NCT03974035
Last Updated: 2020-02-13
Study Results
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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COMPLETED
PHASE2
52 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-01-10
2020-01-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Therefore, bimaxillary osteotomy is a frequent surgery and potentially painful in adults. Bimaxillary surgery under general anesthesia is the common practice. And peripheral non-ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve blocks are widely used by surgeons. These minor blockades are used to avoid the undesired effects of anesthetics and analgesics; mainly the adverse respiratory effects of opioids. The practice of loco-regional anesthesia provides a control of perioperative pain in a multimodal way showing effective postoperative analgesia and minimizing the respiratory depression caused by the excess use of opioids.
In general, during bimaxillary surgery the surgeon performs the infiltrations with local anesthetic (LA) in a pre-incisional manner for the blockade of the terminal branches of the maxillary and mandibular nerve intranasally and intraorally. The choice of LA is influenced by considerations such as the start of action, duration and toxicity. A wide range of LA has been used in maxillofacial surgery, such as lidocaine and ropivacaine among others. Both LA produce a reversible blockade of the sodium channel of the neuronal membrane, and are synthetic derivatives of cocaine. Both possess three essential functional units (hydrophilic tertiary amide chain, linked by an intermediate amide chain, to another lipophilic aromatic ring-portion). This means, both LA are amide type; but even if they belong to the same group of LA there is still great differences in the beginning of action, duration of action and toxicity. Lidocaine has a faster start of action (short latency) than ropivacaine, and has an antiarrhythmic effect. Ropivacaine is more potent, the action last longer than lidocaine, has vasoconstrictor effect by itself and is less cardiotoxic than other equipotent LA such as bupivacaine and levobupivacaine.
The investigators avoid the use of a combination of LA for maxillary and mandibular nerve block. The combination of several local anesthetics in the same nerve block is sometimes used in perioperative anesthesia with the intention of compensating the short duration of action of some agents whose start of action is fast, such as lidocaine, and the high latency of the agents that present a more lasting action, such as ropivacaine. The combination of lidocaine and ropivacaine offers clinical advantages (rapid onset, long duration). However, to date, indications for combining LA are scarce because of the use of catheters in many forms of regional anesthesia that allow to prolong the duration of the block. This is nevertheless not an extended practice among anesthesiologists in maxillofacial surgery. On the other hand, it is important to also remember avoiding the use of maximum doses of two LA combined, which is based on the erroneous belief that their toxicities are independent; on the contrary, the toxicities have an additive character.
Multiple drugs have been used to increase the time of action of LA, such as adrenaline, clonidine, dexamethasone, ketamine and dexmedetomidine, among others. In the investigator's patients, adrenaline is always administered along with physiological serum pre-incision by the surgeon at the local level to improve the surgical field. The use of clonidine is ruled out because it is not supplied in the hospital center where the researchers will carry out the study. The use of dexamethasone and ketamine is ruled out, because they will be administered intravenously in the patient's perioperative period as anti-inflammatory agents and anesthetic adjuvant, respectively. And the use of dexmedetomidine is also ruled out in order to prolong the effect of the nerve blockade as this indication is not in the technical file.
Thus, the investigators propose to use firstly lidocaine and adrenaline pre-incision (antiarrhythmic effect and short duration of action). And secondly, they propose to use ropivacaine without adjuvant before extubation (vasoconstrictor effect and longer duration of action).
The control of postoperative pain is a primary factor to achieve greater patient satisfaction, better rehabilitation and shorter hospital stay. The current clinical guidelines recommend the management of postoperative pain control in a multimodal manner; and this includes the use of local anesthetics.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Control Group
Patients undergoing elective bimaxillary osteotomy who receive a preincisional infiltration of lidocaine and adrenaline.
No interventions assigned to this group
Study Group
Patients undergoing elective bimaxillary osteotomy who receive two infiltrations (firstly pre-incision with lidocaine and adrenaline, secondly pre-extubation with ropivacaine).
Second infiltration pre-extubation with ropivacaine
The surgeon will proceed firstly with pre-incisional infiltration with lidocaine and adrenaline after intubation, and secondly with pre-extubation infiltration with ropivacaine at the intraoral and intranasal submucosal level in the maxilla and jaw to block the terminal branches of the maxillary and mandibular nerve
Interventions
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Second infiltration pre-extubation with ropivacaine
The surgeon will proceed firstly with pre-incisional infiltration with lidocaine and adrenaline after intubation, and secondly with pre-extubation infiltration with ropivacaine at the intraoral and intranasal submucosal level in the maxilla and jaw to block the terminal branches of the maxillary and mandibular nerve
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* age \<18 years
* reinterventions
* urgent surgeries
* allergies to local anesthetics
* allergies to anti-inflammatories agents
* allergies to opioids
* American Society of Anesthesiology Physical Status Examination System (ASA) \>3
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Servei Central d'Anestesiologia
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Gloria Molins Ballabriga
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Federico Hernández-Alfaro, MD, DDS, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Instituto Maxilofacial - Centro Médico Teknon
Miriam DeNadal, MD, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Hospital Valle de Hebrón
Locations
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Centro Medico Teknon - Grupo Quirón Salud
Barcelona, , Spain
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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1TDGM
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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