Abstract
Introduction
Arthroscopic hip surgery is associated with significant
postoperative pain. Femoral nerve blocks have been shown to improve
postoperative analgesia at the expense of quadriceps weakness. The
pericapsular nerve group (PENG) block could be an alternative that may
improve postoperative analgesia while preserving quadriceps strength.
Our hypothesis was that a PENG block would provide superior
postoperative analgesia compared with a sham block following
arthroscopic hip surgery.
Methods
Subjects presenting for arthroscopic hip surgery were randomized in
a 1:1 ratio to either an ultrasound-guided unilateral, single-injection
PENG block (PENG group) with 20 mL of 0.5% ropivacaine or a sham
injection with 5 mL of 0.9% normal saline (Sham group) prior to
receiving general anesthesia. The primary outcome of this study was
worst pain score within 30 min of emergence from anesthesia. Secondary
outcomes included opioid consumption, patient satisfaction with
analgesia, opioid-related adverse events, and persistent opioid use at 1
week.
Results
Sixty-eight subjects, 34 from the PENG group and 34 from the Sham
group, completed the study per protocol. Analysis of the primary outcome
demonstrated a mean difference in pain scores of −0.79 (95% CI −1.96 to
0.37; p=0.17) between the PENG and Sham groups immediately following
surgery. No secondary outcomes showed statistically significant
differences between groups.
Discussion
This study demonstrates that a preoperative PENG block does not
improve analgesia following arthroscopic hip surgery.
Trial reigstration number
NCT04508504
Funder
University of Virginia, Department of
Anesthesiology
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
12 articles.
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