scholarly journals Comparison of Continuous Epidural Blockade and Continuous Femoral Nerve Block on Postoperative Pain in Total Knee Replacement Surgeries: A Prospective Randomised Controlled Study

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-73
Author(s):  
K. Shanthini ◽  
Nishkala Chandra Sekar ◽  
Kusuma Mathai

Background: The use of epidural analgesia in the management of postoperative pain following orthopedic surgeries has evolved as a critical component of a multimodal approach to achieve the goal of pain relief, early mobilization, and improved compliance with physiotherapy resulting in overall improved outcomes. Aim: The aim of this study is to compare continuous femoral nerve block with continuous epidural block technique for postoperative analgesia in patients undergoing elective total knee replacement surgery.Subjects and Methods:The patients belonging to the ASA I to III scheduled for various knee surgeries under spinal anesthesia were enrolled in this study. They were randomly divided into two equal groups of thirty-three patients each. The Group F patients received continuous femoral nerve blockade and in the Group E patients continuous epidural blocked preoperatively.Results:The analgesic efficacy of both continuous femoral nerve block and continuous epidural nerve block was equal as measured by the visual analogue scores. The incidence of Hypotension was more in the Epidural group. The adverse effects due to the Continuous Femoral Nerve block were lower in comparison with the Continuous Epidural block technique.Conclusion:Continuous femoral nerve blockade provides postoperative analgesia equivalent to that obtained with a continuous epidural blocked but with lesser side effects.

2019 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Reinaldo Grueso Angulo ◽  
Antonio José Bonilla Ramírez ◽  
Ginna Milena Moreno Oliveros ◽  
Diego Alberto Moreno Martínez ◽  
Diego Aldemar Quesada Montealegre ◽  
...  

Total knee replacement is a painful surgical procedure. The inadequate control of postoperative pain is associated with adverse outcomes in the short and long term. Continuous femoral block has been shown to be effective and efficient as part of multimodal analgesia. This series of 48 patients who underwent total knee replacement, who received multimodal analgesic treatment including continuous femoral nerve block, documents the pain control profile during the first 48 hours. This is a successful experience of implementing regional techniques as part of perioperative pain relief, as documented in the literature. We emphasize that each institution must know its technical and human resource and characterize its patients, in order to implement multimodal analgesia protocols that include this regional technique. We also suggest to monitor and implement continuous improvement processes.


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