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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06337968
NA

CPB for Arthroscopic Hip Surgery

Sponsor: The Second Hospital of Shandong University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Arthroscopic hip surgery is being increasingly performed to treat both intraarticular and extraarticular hip diseases. Despite the minimally invasive approach, patients undergoing arthroscopic hip surgery still suffer severe pain due to the complex nature of hip innervation. Postoperative pain reduces patient satisfaction and delay patient recovery and discharge. The efficacy of regional anesthesia techniques in postoperative pain management have been proved in various surgeries. However, it remains controversial whether or not peripheral nerve blocks can significantly improve postoperative analgesia after hip arthroscopy. Several studies have shown that the fascia iliac block cannot improve postoperative analgesia for hip arthroscopy because it blocks only some branches of the lumbar plexus but not the sacral plexus. Circum-Psoas Block (CPB) which has been defined in recent years is able to block the lumbar plexus nerves as well as sacral plexus such as the sciatic, superior gluteal, and inferior gluteal nerves. Therefore, the investigators predict that it can provide effective postoperative analgesia for hip arthroscopy. In this study, the researchers aim to investigate the effectiveness of CPB in hip arthroscopy.

Official title: Circum-Psoas Block for Arthroscopic Hip Surgery: A Randomized Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

74

Start Date

2024-12-01

Completion Date

2025-12-31

Last Updated

2024-11-25

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Circum-psoas Block

Ultrasound-guided circum-psoas block with 40 mL of treatment drug (Ropivacaine 0.2% \[local anesthetic\]) 30 minutes prior to induction of anesthesia.

PROCEDURE

Sham block

Perform ultrasound scanning without puncture.