AI Article Synopsis

  • Inadequate pain relief after thoracotomy can cause respiratory issues post-surgery, so a study was conducted to compare morphine use in 50 patients undergoing elective lung surgery.
  • The patients were divided into two groups: one received an ultrasound-guided paravertebral catheter and the other received a serratus anterior plane catheter for pain management.
  • The results showed that although the paravertebral block group used slightly less morphine than the serratus group, the difference was not significant, indicating both techniques are effective for managing postoperative pain.

Article Abstract

Context: Inadequate pain relief after thoracotomy may lead to postoperative respiratory complications.

Aims: We have compared total morphine consumption in 24 hours following thoracotomy.

Settings And Design: This prospective randomized pilot study involved 50 patients undergoing elective thoracotomy for lung surgery at AIIMS, New Delhi.

Patients And Methods: Fifty patients undergoing elective thoracotomy were randomly allocated into two groups. In Group I patients, ultrasound (USG)-guided paravertebral catheter was inserted preoperatively and in Group II patients, serratus anterior plane (SAP) catheter was inserted by the surgeon before closure. Ropivacaine bolus (group I: 0.2% 0.1 ml/kg and group II: 0.375% 0.4 ml/kg) was given before extubation, followed by its continuous infusion for 24 hours. If the numerical rating scale (NRS) was >3, then patients were given intravenous (i.v.) morphine 3 mg. Total 24-hour morphine consumption, duration of effective analgesia, hemodynamic parameters, side effects, and overall patient satisfaction were recorded.

Statistical Analysis Used: T-test was used to compare the parametric values in both the groups, whereas the Mann-Whitney U-test was performed to compare the nonparametric values.

Results: Postoperative morphine requirement in the ParaVertebral Block (PVB) group (8.65 ± 4.27 mg) was less as compared to the SAP group (11.87 ± 6.22 mg) but that was not statistically significant ( 0.052). Postoperative pain scores at rest and on movement, patient satisfaction, and incidence of chronic post-thoracotomy pain were comparable in both the groups.

Conclusion: SAP block with continuous catheter technique seems to be a safe and effective modality for the management of acute postoperative pain after thoracotomy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7796745PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/sja.SJA_143_20DOI Listing

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