髋关节镜下周围神经阻滞后的结果。

Michael E Steinhaus, James Rosneck, Christopher S Ahmad, T Sean Lynch
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引用次数: 14

摘要

髋关节镜术后疼痛控制是一项重大的临床挑战,术后疼痛需要大量使用阿片类药物。外周神经阻滞(pnb)已成为改善疼痛和限制阿片类药物使用后果的一种选择。本研究的目的是对髋关节镜下与PNB相关的结果进行全面回顾。我们假设在髋关节镜检查中使用PNB可以改善预后,并且并发症很少。2015年1月,我们对PubMed、Medline、Scopus和Embase数据库中报告结果数据的英文文章进行了系统评价,由2名审稿人独立审查纳入研究。如有可能,将相似的结果结合起来生成频率加权平均值。6项研究符合本综述的纳入标准,共报道了710例髋关节镜检查患者。PNB组和比较组的平均年龄分别为37.0岁和37.7岁,共报告281例(40.5%)男性和412例(59.5%)女性患者。与对照组相比,PNB组使用较低的吗啡当量剂量和较低的住院率,持续降低了术后麻醉后护理单位(PACU)疼痛。术后恶心和/或呕吐以及PACU出院时间显示出不同的结果。满意度高,并发症少。总之,PNB与术后疼痛、镇痛药使用和住院率的减少有关,尽管有类似的恶心/呕吐率和出院时间的报道。目前的PNB技术是多种多样的,未来的研究工作应该集中在检查哪些方法在髋关节镜检查中提供最佳的风险-收益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Outcomes After Peripheral Nerve Block in Hip Arthroscopy.

Pain control following hip arthroscopy presents a significant clinical challenge, with postoperative pain requiring considerable opioid use. Peripheral nerve blocks (PNBs) have emerged as one option to improve pain and limit the consequences of opioid use. The purpose of this study is to provide a comprehensive review of outcomes associated with PNB in hip arthroscopy. We hypothesize that the use of PNB in hip arthroscopy leads to improved outcomes and is associated with few complications. A systematic review of PubMed, Medline, Scopus, and Embase databases was conducted through January 2015 for English-language articles reporting outcome data, with 2 reviewers independently reviewing studies for inclusion. When available, similar outcomes were combined to generate frequency-weighted means. Six studies met the inclusion criteria for this review, reporting on 710 patients undergoing hip arthroscopy. The mean ages were 37.0 and 37.7 years for the PNB and comparator groups, respectively, with a reported total of 281 (40.5%) male and 412 (59.5%) female patients. Postoperative post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) pain was consistently reduced in the PNB group, with the use of a lower morphine equivalent dose and lower rates of inpatient admission, compared with that in the control groups. Postoperative nausea and/or vomiting as well as PACU discharge time showed mixed results. High satisfaction and few complications were reported. In conclusion, PNB is associated with reductions in postoperative pain, analgesic use, and the rate of inpatient admissions, though similar rates of nausea/vomiting and time to discharge were reported. Current PNB techniques are varied, and future research efforts should focus on examining which of these methods provides the optimal risk-benefit profile in hip arthroscopy.

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