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Anesthesia & Clinical Research

Anesthesia & Clinical Research
Open Access

ISSN: 2155-6148

+44 1223 790975

Abstract

Adductor Canal Block Combined with Sciatic Nerve Block Vs. Local Analgesic Infiltration for Pain Control after Total Knee Arthroplasty

Magdy H Eldegwy and Mohamed A Negm

Background: A combined adductor canal block (ACB) and sciatic nerve block (SNB) is new different way to achieve an efficient postoperative analgesia after total knee replacement (TKR) that spares the weakness of quadriceps femoris muscle. This prospective randomized controlled trial aimed to evaluate the efficiency and safety of the combined adductor canal with sciatic nerve blocks versus local analgesic infiltration alone for pain control after total knee replacement.
Patients and methods: Forty patients (ASA II, and III), undergoing unilateral total knee replacement, were randomly and allocated to two groups (20 patients each), block group (ACB+SNB): the patient received US- guided adductor canal block combined with sciatic nerve block, local group (LAI): patient received local analgesic injection (LAI) to entire of the knee joint. The primary outcomes were postoperative visual analogue scale (VAS) at rest and with movement, first request of analgesics and 24 h total consumption of morphine. Secondary outcome measures included sedation score and side effects associated with morphine consumption like nausea, vomiting.
Results: There was a significant reduction in postoperative morphine consumption, VAS, nausea and vomiting and sedation at 12 h in local group. There were no complications attributable to the ACB or SNB blocks.
Conclusion: Combined adductor canal with sciatic nerve blocks could significantly reduce VAS scores, morphine consumption, and first request for analgesia in comparison with local analgesic infiltration alone following TKA. Additionally, there is a lower incidence of sedation, nausea and vomiting in the combined blocks group.

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