Effect of ankle versus thigh tourniquets on post-operative pain in foot and ankle surgery

Ashish Mishra, Ahmed Barakat, J. Mangwani, Jakub Kazda, Sagar Tiwatane, Sana Mohammed Aamir Shaikh, L. Houchen-Wolloff, Vipul Kaushik
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Abstract

BACKGROUND Tourniquets are commonly used in elective extremity orthopaedic surgery to reduce blood loss, improve visualization in the surgical field, and to potentially reduce surgical time. There is a lack of consensus in existing guidelines regarding the optimal tourniquet pressure, placement site, and duration of use. There is a paucity of data on the relationship between the site of a tourniquet and postoperative pain in foot and ankle surgery. AIM To explore the relationship between tourniquet site and intensity of post-operative pain scores in patients undergoing elective foot and ankle surgery. METHODS Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data on 201 patients who underwent foot and ankle surgery in a single institution was undertaken. Intraoperative tourniquet duration, tourniquet pressure and site, and postoperative pain scores using Visual Analogue Score were collected in immediate recovery, at six hours and at 24 h post-op. Scatter plots were used to analyse the data and to assess for the statistical correlation between tourniquet pressure, duration, site, and pain scores using Pearson correlation coefficient. RESULTS All patients who underwent foot and ankle surgery had tourniquet pressure of 250 mmHg for ankle tourniquet and 300 mmHg for thigh. There was no correlation between the site of the tourniquet and pain scores in recovery, at six hours and after 24 h. There was a weak correlation between tourniquet time and Visual Analogue Score immediately post-op (r = 0.14, P = 0.04) but not at six or 24 h post-operatively. CONCLUSION This study shows that there was no statistically significant correlation between tourniquet pressure, site and post-op pain in patients undergoing foot and ankle surgery. The choice of using a tourniquet is based on the surgeon's preference, with the goal of minimizing the duration of its application at the operative site.
踝部止血带与大腿止血带对足踝手术术后疼痛的影响
背景止血带通常用于择期四肢矫形手术,以减少失血量、改善手术视野并缩短手术时间。现有指南对止血带的最佳压力、放置部位和使用时间缺乏共识。关于止血带部位与足踝外科术后疼痛之间关系的数据也很少。目的 探讨止血带部位与足踝择期手术患者术后疼痛评分强度之间的关系。方法 对一家医疗机构前瞻性收集的 201 名足踝手术患者的数据进行回顾性分析。收集了术中止血带持续时间、止血带压力和部位,以及术后恢复期、术后 6 小时和术后 24 小时的视觉模拟评分。使用散点图分析数据,并使用皮尔逊相关系数评估止血带压力、持续时间、部位和疼痛评分之间的统计学相关性。结果 所有接受足踝手术的患者踝部止血带压力为 250 mmHg,大腿止血带压力为 300 mmHg。止血带部位与恢复期、6 小时后和 24 小时后的疼痛评分之间没有相关性。止血带时间与术后即时视觉模拟评分之间存在微弱的相关性(r = 0.14,P = 0.04),但与术后 6 小时或 24 小时后的评分没有相关性。结论 本研究表明,在接受足踝手术的患者中,止血带压力、部位和术后疼痛之间没有统计学意义上的显著相关性。是否使用止血带取决于外科医生的偏好,目的是尽量缩短手术部位使用止血带的时间。
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