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Multifidus Cervicis and Inter-Semispinal Plane Blocks in Analgesia After Cervical Spine Surgery
Sponsor: Zagazig University
Summary
Major spine surgery with multilevel instrumentation is followed by a large amount of opioid consumption, significant pain, and difficult mobilization Pain is one of the main factors limiting ambulation, increasing the risk of thromboembolism by immobility, and causing metabolic changes that affect other systems. Therefore, individualized pain management with the use of appropriate analgesic techniques is of paramount importance. Moreover, early intervention in rehabilitation aiming at a better postoperative recovery may reduce the length of hospital stay and return to daily activity. Effective pain management is one of the crucial components in enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS). Numerous regional anesthetic techniques have been used to provide analgesia following cervical spine surgery, including patient-controlled epidural analgesia, cervical paravertebral block, cervical plexus block, cervical erector spinae plane blocks, and local infiltration analgesia, however, each of these techniques has specific limitations that prevent them from being the analgesic technique of choice for such surgeries. Up to the author's knowledge, there is no study done to compare multifidus cervicis plane block versus inter-semispinal plane block in a randomized controlled clinical trial as preemptive analgesia in patients undergoing cervical spine surgery.
Official title: Comparison Between Multifidus Cervicis and Inter-semispinal Plane Blocks in Analgesia After Cervical Spine Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
21 Years - 60 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
105
Start Date
2023-10-20
Completion Date
2026-04-01
Last Updated
2025-07-17
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
control group
patients will be operated under general anesthesia
MCP group
patients will receive ultrasound-guided MCP block with 15 ml of bupivacaine 0.25% on each side followed by general anesthesia.
ISP group
patients will receive ultrasound-guided ISP block with 15 ml of bupivacaine 0.25% on each side followed by general anesthesia.
Locations (1)
Faculty of medicine, zagazig university
Zagazig, Alsharqia, Egypt