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Paravertebral regional blocks decrease length of stay following surgery for pectus excavatum in children. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explored postoperative pain management methods for pectus excavatum repair, comparing traditional epidural analgesia with intercostal and paravertebral regional blocks.
  • The results showed that paravertebral and intercostal blocks significantly reduced hospital stay duration for patients primarily treated under the Nuss procedure, although they led to increased narcotic use and costs overall.
  • Despite higher pain scores on the first day for the alternative methods, paravertebral pain control was effective by day three, indicating it as a viable alternative to epidural methods.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Management of postoperative pain following repair of pectus excavatum has traditionally included thoracic epidural analgesia, narcotics, and benzodiazepines. We hypothesized that the use of intercostal or paravertebral regional blocks could result in decreased inpatient length of stay (LOS).

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 137 patients (118 Nuss and 19 Ravitch - Nuss and Ravitch patients were analyzed separately) who underwent surgical repair of pectus excavatum with pain management via epidural, intercostal, or paravertebral analgesia from January 2009-December 2012. Measured outcomes included LOS, pain scores, benzodiazepine/narcotic requirements, emesis, professional fees, hospital cost, and total cost.

Results: In the Nuss patients, LOS was significantly reduced in the paravertebral group (p<0.005) and the intercostal group (p<0.005) compared to the epidural group, but was paradoxically countered by a nonsignificant increase in total cost (p=0.09). While benzodiazepine doses/day was not increased in the paravertebral group (p=0.08), an increase was seen in narcotic use (p<0.005). Despite increased narcotic use, no differences were seen in emesis between epidural and paravertebral use. Compared to epidural, pain scores were higher for both intercostal and paravertebral on day one (p<0.005), but equivalent for paravertebral on day three (p=0.62). The Ravitch group was too small for detailed independent statistical analysis but followed the same overall trend seen in the Nuss patients.

Conclusion: Our use of paravertebral continuous infusion pain catheters for pectus excavatum repair was an effective alternative to epidural analgesia resulting in shorter LOS but not a decrease in overall cost.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2015.10.037DOI Listing

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