At a glance
ClinicalIndex Comparison RecordStandardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.
Optimization of a Fast-track Concept for Knee Replacement: A Single-blind, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Late local infiltration analgesia and Early local infiltration analgesia for Knee Arthropathy and 2 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 70 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
In an estimated 150,000 patients, a knee joint replacement is performed in Germany every year. The perioperative care of the patients aims at an optimal surgical technique, which leads to a high functionality in the joint, and above all at an adequate pain treatment. Patients experience pain especially intraoperatively and in the first days after the operation. The intensity of pain is a decisive factor that can hinder the patient's mobilization. In the KneeOptOut study (ethics application number EA4/009/17), which has already been successfully carried out and approved by this ethics committee, it was shown that the use of local infiltration anaesthesia (LIA) for pain therapy after primary knee endoprosthetics is comparable to catheter-supported regional anaesthesia (manuscript under review at the European Journal of Anaesthesiology). During surgery, the morphine requirement of patients in the LIA group was significantly higher than that of patients who underwent catheterization. Postoperatively, however, both subjective pain by VAS and opiate consumption were comparable. In order to optimize the intraoperative opiate need/consumption, an early-intraoperative procedure for local infiltration anesthesia will now be compared with the previous late-intraoperative procedure. Both procedures correspond to SOP for the treatment of primary knee endoprostheses and are currently used depending on the surgeon's requirements.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Patient receive an infiltration of local anaesthetics around the knee directly after total knee replacement for postoperative pain control.
The local infiltration analgesia is applied in a total of 4 steps during the preparation of the knee joint: 1. after the skin incision, 2. after the capsule incision, 3. after complete exposure of the knee joint, 4. when the posterior knee capsule is reached.