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COMPLETED
NCT06675916
NA

Assessment of PENG Block Analgesia Versus Intra-articular Infiltration in Hip Prosthesis Surgery

Sponsor: GCS Ramsay Santé pour l'Enseignement et la Recherche

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

After hip arthroplasty, pain intensity is maximum within the first 6 hours and is then estimated to last between 36 and 72 hours. Pain management (analgesia) after hip prosthetic surgery remains a challenge. A bad analgesic treatment can result in delay in mobilization/ambulation and thus increase duration of patient's stay which can have a significant economic impact. The different recognized analgesia techniques (intra-articular infiltration and peripheral nerve blocks) are effective but have shown certain limits. A new peripheral nerve block, the PENG block has shown very encouraging results on postoperative analgesia quality. In this context, this research is based on the hypothesis that ultrasound-guided PENG block could provide more effective analgesia than intra-articular infiltration during mini-invasive anterior hip prosthesis surgery.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2022-03-01

Completion Date

2023-03-31

Last Updated

2026-07-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

PROCEDURE

PENG Block with lidocaine hydrochloride

Intervention is ultrasound-guided PENG block analgesia with lidocaine hydrochloride

PROCEDURE

Intra-articular infiltration with lidocaine hydrochloride

Intervention is intra-articular analgesia with lidocaine hydrochloride

Locations (1)

Médipôle Hôpital Privé

Villeurbanne, France