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Perioperative Analgesic Modality and Effectiveness in Paediatric Patients Who Have Undergone Common Major Urology Surgery - A Two-Year Retrospective Study.

Authors :
TAN YT
YEOH CN
AZLINA M.
AHMAD AS
NURHAFIIZHOH A. H.
NADIA M. N.
Source :
Medicine & Health (Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia). Jun2023, Vol. 18 Issue 1, p59-70. 12p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Perioperative paediatric major urology surgery pain management remains challenging. These surgeries require general anaesthesia (GA) combined with either regional analgesia technique or systemic morphine infusion for optimal pain relief. We aimed to compare and evaluate the effectiveness of both analgesic techniques. This single centre retrospective descriptive study involved 88 patients, aged 3 months to 12 years old with American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) I or II status, who underwent major urology surgery under GA. Group A patients received perioperative systemic morphine while Group B received regional anaesthesia blocks (continuous caudal epidural infusion, single-shot caudal blocks or singleshot erector spinae blocks). We measured requirements of perioperative rescue intravenous (IV) fentanyl, pain scores using Face, Leg, Activity, Cry, Consolability (FLACC) scale, perioperative non-opioid IV analgesia usage and associated complications. Intraoperative rescue fentanyl in both groups was comparable. Intraoperative non-opioid analgesia and postoperative rescue fentanyl requirement were significantly higher in Group A compared to Group B (p<0.001). Median FLACC scores in Group A were higher than Group B (p<0.001) for first 12 hours post-surgery. Commonest complications in Group A was vomiting (38.6%) and peri-catheter leak in Group B (6.81%). Regional anaesthesia technique is superior to systemic morphine in providing analgesia in the first 12 hours post paediatric major urology surgery and is devoid of opioid side effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22895728
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Medicine & Health (Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164670108
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17576/MH.2023.1801.07