1. Multimodal analgesia protocol for pain management after total knee arthroplasty: comparison of three different regional analgesic techniques.
- Author
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Karpetas GZ, Spyraki MK, Giakoumakis SI, Fligou FG, Megas PD, Voyagis GS, and Panagiotopoulos EC
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Combined Modality Therapy methods, Female, Femoral Nerve drug effects, Femoral Nerve physiology, Humans, Injections, Intra-Articular methods, Male, Pain Management methods, Pain, Postoperative diagnosis, Prospective Studies, Analgesia, Epidural methods, Analgesics administration & dosage, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee adverse effects, Autonomic Nerve Block methods, Pain Measurement methods, Pain, Postoperative prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate three different analgesic techniques, continuous epidural analgesia (EA), continuous intra-articular (IA) infusion analgesia and continuous femoral nerve block (FNB) in postoperative pain management, length of hospital stay (LOS), and time of patient mobilization after total knee arthroplasty (TKA)., Methods: Seventy-two patients undergoing TKA were randomly allocated into three groups according to the analgesic technique used for postoperative pain management. Group EA patients received epidural analgesia (control group), group IA received intra-articular infusion and group FNB received femoral nerve block., Results: Upon analyzing the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) scores at rest, at passive and active movement, up to 3 days postoperatively, we observed no statistically significant differences at any time point among the three groups. Similarly, no association among these analgesic techniques (EA, IA, FNB) was revealed regarding LOS. However, significant differences emerged concerning the time of mobilization. Patients who received IA achieved earlier mobilization compared to FNB and EA., Conclusions: Both IA and FNB generate similar analgesic effect with EA for postoperative pain management after TKA. However, IA appears to be significantly more effective in early mobilization compared to EA and FNB. Finally, no clinically important differences could be detected regarding LOS among the techniques studied., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2021