Analgesic Efficacy of Quadratus Lumborum Block Against Erector Spinae Plane Block in Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy

NCT ID: NCT06828497

Last Updated: 2025-02-17

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

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

92 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-02-27

Study Completion Date

2025-02-02

Brief Summary

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The current investigation aimed to assess the postoperative analgesic efficacy of quadratus lumborum block against erector spinae plane block in sleeve gastrectomy surgeries

Detailed Description

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In bariatric surgeries, overall pain is a conglomerate of three different and clinically separate components: incisional pain (somatic pain) due to trocar insertion sites, visceral pain (deep intra-abdominal pain), and shoulder pain due to peritoneal stretching and diaphragmatic irritation associated with carbon dioxide insufflation. Without effective treatment, this ongoing pain may delay recovery, mandate inpatient admission, and thereby increase the cost of such care.

The ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane (ESP) block influences both visceral and somatic pain; therefore, its use in laparoscopic surgeries and other abdominal surgeries can be advantageous. . ESP block is reported to lead to an analgesic effect on somatic and visceral pain by affecting the ventral rami and rami communicantes that include sympathetic nerve fibers, as local anesthetic spreads through the paravertebral space. When performed bilaterally, it can be as effective as thoracic epidural analgesia. Thoracic surgery and T seven level for abdominal surgeries. The number of surgeries involving multiple procedures and/or incisions is increasing, with such surgeries requiring complex analgesia protocols for pain management.

Currently, the Quadratus Lumborum (QL) block is performed as one of the perioperative pain management procedures for all generations (pediatrics, pregnant, and adult) undergoing abdominal surgery. The local anesthetic injected via the approach of the posterior QL block (QL 2 block) can more easily extend beyond the TAP to the thoracic paravertebral space or the thoracolumbar plane, producing somatic and visceral analgesia; the posterior QL block entails a broader sensory-level analgesic and may generate analgesia from T7 to L1

Conditions

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Quadratus Lumborum Block Erector Spinae Plane Block Sleeve Gastrectomy

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Quadratus lumborum Block Group

The patient was in the lateral position, and the US probe was placed in the anterior axillary line to visualize the typical triple abdominal layers. Then, the probe was placed in the midaxillary line, and at this juncture, the layers of abdominal layers started to taper. When the probe was placed in the posterior axillary line as per the posterior approach, sonoanatomy showed first the transversus abdominis disappearing, then the internal oblique and external oblique forming aponeurosis, and the appearance of the QL muscle was noticed. The posterior aspect of the QL muscle was confirmed, and a 22-G block needle was guided, in plane, and the needle tip was inserted into this aspect of the QL muscle. Following aspiration, the local anesthetic was injected into the lift behind the QL muscle. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Technique of erector spinae plane block:

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The patient will be placed in a sitting position. Under aseptic conditions, a high-frequency linear transducer will be placed on the spinous process at the T8 level on the parasagittal plane and then slide 2.5-3 cm laterally to visualize the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. Using the in-plane technique, the needle was advanced between the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. The correct location was confirmed, and local anesthetic was injected between the muscle and transverse process. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Erector spinae plane block Group

The patient will be placed in a sitting position. Under aseptic conditions, a high-frequency linear transducer will be placed on the spinous process at the T8 level on the parasagittal plane and then slide 2.5-3 cm laterally to visualize the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. Using the in-plane technique, the needle was advanced between the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. The correct location was confirmed, and local anesthetic was injected between the muscle and transverse process. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Technique of posterior quadratus lumborum block (QL 2 block):

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The patient was in the lateral position, and the US probe was placed in the anterior axillary line to visualize the typical triple abdominal layers. Then, the probe was placed in the midaxillary line, and at this juncture, the layers of abdominal layers started to taper. When the probe was placed in the posterior axillary line as per the posterior approach, sonoanatomy showed first the transversus abdominis disappearing, then the internal oblique and external oblique forming aponeurosis, and the appearance of the QL muscle was noticed. The posterior aspect of the QL muscle was confirmed, and a 22-G block needle was guided, in plane, and the needle tip was inserted into this aspect of the QL muscle. Following aspiration, the local anesthetic was injected into the lift behind the QL muscle. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Interventions

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Technique of posterior quadratus lumborum block (QL 2 block):

The patient was in the lateral position, and the US probe was placed in the anterior axillary line to visualize the typical triple abdominal layers. Then, the probe was placed in the midaxillary line, and at this juncture, the layers of abdominal layers started to taper. When the probe was placed in the posterior axillary line as per the posterior approach, sonoanatomy showed first the transversus abdominis disappearing, then the internal oblique and external oblique forming aponeurosis, and the appearance of the QL muscle was noticed. The posterior aspect of the QL muscle was confirmed, and a 22-G block needle was guided, in plane, and the needle tip was inserted into this aspect of the QL muscle. Following aspiration, the local anesthetic was injected into the lift behind the QL muscle. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Technique of erector spinae plane block:

The patient will be placed in a sitting position. Under aseptic conditions, a high-frequency linear transducer will be placed on the spinous process at the T8 level on the parasagittal plane and then slide 2.5-3 cm laterally to visualize the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. Using the in-plane technique, the needle was advanced between the transverse process and erector spinae muscle. The correct location was confirmed, and local anesthetic was injected between the muscle and transverse process. The same procedure was performed bilaterally

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* (ASA) I-III,
* age \> 18 years and less than 60 years
* both sexes
* scheduled for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy under general anaesthesia

Exclusion Criteria

* patient refusal,
* bleeding or coagulation abnormality
* local skin infection and sepsis at site of the block,
* hypersensitivity to the study drugs,
* body mass index \> 50 kg/m²,
* Drug abuse, diabetes mellitus (DM), neurological or neuromuscular diseases, cardiovascular illnesses
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

60 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Port Said University hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Adel Ali Hassan

lecturer of anaesthesia and intensive cae

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Egyptian liver hospital

Al Mansurah, , Egypt

Site Status

Countries

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Egypt

Other Identifiers

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CT2023-014

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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