Overview

The Efficacy of Thoracic Erector Spinae Plane Block For Perioperative Analgesia in Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery for Super Obese Patients.

Status:
COMPLETED
Trial end date:
2025-06-15
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
The epidemic of overweight and obesity presents a major challenge to chronic disease prevention and health across the life course around the world. \[1\] Bariatric surgery has proved to be an efficient intervention in the management of obesity. As a result, the number of post-bariatric surgery patients in the population is growing \[2\]. Postoperative analgesia presents various challenges in vulnerable patient groups suffering from obesity. With the high potential risk of respiratory depression and postoperative pulmonary complications associated with opioid use, such as atelectasis and pneumonia, the availability of other pain management modalities is essential \[14\]. Ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is a regional anesthesia technique where local anesthetic agent is injected deep to the erector spinae muscle to fascial plane and allowed to diffuse caudally and cranially. It is supposed to provide both visceral and somatic abdominal analgesia \[3\]. ESPB is effective, easy to perform, and can be performed in a short time. \[4\] It has been shown efficacy in different conditions such as thoracic surgery, trauma, cardiac surgery, breast surgery, and abdominal surgery \[5\]. However, the main concern with the ESPB block is feasibility together with the potency of the block in challenging populations, such as patients suffering from obesity. Peripheral nerve blocks in the obese may pose challenges, like difficulties in proper patient positioning and landmark identification. However, Ultrasound guidance may help overcome many difficulties in regional techniques. But as expected, targets are more deeply situated in obese patients and the ultrasound beams are attenuated as they travel a greater distance through tissue layers. Additionally, when crossing a tissue boundary, a portion is reflected back to the transducer creating artifacts like speckling and clutter which are particular problems in the obese patient. \[15\] Few studies examined the use of ESPB in bariatric surgery \[3,6,7\], all indicating potential benefits of the technique in terms of opioid sparing and pain control. To date, the efficacy of ESPB has not been examined in superobese patient. So we aim to compare the perioperative analgesic effect of bilateral ultrasound-guided ESPB with controls, Local bupivacaine infiltration to the trocar sites, in super obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery We hypothesis that ESBP provides good applicable modality of perioperative analgesia for superobese patients undergoing bariatric surgeries.
Phase:
NA
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Amany Ahmed Eissa
Treatments:
Bupivacaine
Lidocaine
Midazolam