AI Article Synopsis

  • Pain control through local anaesthetic infiltration was evaluated to see if it could reduce opioid use and improve pain management after surgery for femoral neck fractures.
  • In a double-blind study with 33 patients, those receiving ropivacaine injections post-surgery showed no significant reduction in opioid consumption or pain compared to those receiving saline.
  • Although the ropivacaine group had slightly less nausea on the second postoperative day, the placebo group reported less pain, indicating that local anaesthetic infiltration may not be effective for pain control in this context.

Article Abstract

Pain control may assist early mobilisation after internal fixation of femoral neck fractures. Systemic opioids have significant side effects in elderly patients. We present an evaluation of the effect of local anaesthetic infiltration in such cases , the objective being to decrease the need for postoperative opioids and to improve pain control for patients after surgery. 33 patients undergoing internal fixation with 2 parallel hook pins were randomized into 2 groups in a double blind study (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00529425). 33 patients received intraoperative infiltration followed by 6 postoperative injections through an intraarticular catheter in eight-hour intervals. 19 patients received ropivacaine and 14 received saline. The intervention period was 48 hours and the observation period was 5 days. In both groups there were no restrictions on the total daily dose of rescue analgesics. Pain was assessed at specific postoperative time-points and the daily consumption of opioid drugs needed for analgesia was registered. There was no significantly reduced consumption of standardized opioid rescue analgesics or pain in the study group receiving ropivacaine injections. Apart from a reduction in nausea in the study group on the second postoperative day, there were no significant differences in the occurrence of side effects between the groups. On day 2 the placebo group had less pain than the study group. Local anaesthetic infiltration after fixation of femoral neck fractures does not reduce opioid consumption or pain'.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.5301/HIP.2011.6513DOI Listing

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