Comparing the Analgesia Effects of Single-injection and Continuous Femoral Nerve Blocks with Patient Controlled Analgesia after Total Knee Arthroplasty
Publication year
2013Source
Journal of Arthroplasty, 28, 4, (2013), pp. 608-13ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Anesthesiology
Journal title
Journal of Arthroplasty
Volume
vol. 28
Issue
iss. 4
Page start
p. 608
Page end
p. 13
Subject
DCN MP - Plasticity and memory NCEBP 7: Effective primary care and public healthAbstract
We compared the analgesic effects of single-injection or continuous femoral nerve block (FNB) with intravenous patient controlled analgesia (PCA) opioids. Two hundred patients undergoing knee arthroplasty were randomized to one of the three regimens. Significant knee pain on movement at postoperative 24h was reduced with single-injection (OR 0.30; 95% CI 0.12 to 0.74; P=0.009) or continuous (OR 0.21; 95% CI 0.08 to 0.51; P=0.001) FNB, compared with PCA. Allocation to FNBs also resulted in significantly less opioid consumption, fewer episodes of nausea and vomiting, and achieved knee flexion 90 degrees earlier than allocation to PCA. Compared to single-injection FNB, patients with continuous FNB had lower pain scores on movement at 24h (mean difference -0.57; 95% CI -1.14 to -0.01; P=0.045), consumed less opioid, and had fewer incidences of nausea and vomiting. The analgesic efficacy of single-injection and continuous FNBs was superior to PCA in the immediate postoperative period; with continuous FNB providing better analgesia than single-injection FNB.
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- Academic publications [246860]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93474]
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