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RECRUITING
NCT06766994
NA

The Effect of Two Different Analgesic Techniques on Postoperative Recovery Quality

Sponsor: Ataturk University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Hysterectomy is one of the most frequently performed surgical procedures after Caesarean section in many countries of the world and involves the removal of the uterine corpus with or without the cervix (total hysterectomy) or without the cervix (subtotal or supracervical hysterectomy) to treat a range of gynecological problems. Hysterectomy is performed abdominally, vaginally with laparotomy, or using minimally invasive techniques (laparoscopy, robotic surgery). The abdominal route for hysterectomy is the preferred route in 60-80% of these surgeries. Postoperative recovery is a complex condition affected by various factors such as patient characteristics, surgical procedure, and anesthesia. There are many tools available to measure recovery quality. In recent years, the concept of recovery quality perceived by the patient has attracted attention. The Quality of Recovery-40 questionnaire (QoR-40) is an assessment test used to assess recovery quality and health status in the early postoperative stages. QoR-40 consists of 40 questions that evaluate patients' pain, physical comfort, physical independence, psychological support, and emotional state. Quality of Recovery-15 (QoR-15) is a short postoperative recovery scale developed and validated by Stark et al. in 2013. It is an abbreviated version of the QoR-40 scale. It is easy to use because it is shorter and can be completed in a short time. As in QoR-40, it contains 15 questions that evaluate pain, physical comfort, physical independence, psychological support, and emotional state by the patient. Facilitating the recovery process and optimizing postoperative pain management is an important part of perioperative care. Multimodal analgesia, which combines local anesthesia, peripheral and non-opioid analgesics to minimize systemic opioid requirements and opioid-related side effects, has become increasingly popular. Epidural analgesia, which provides both intraoperative and postoperative analgesia as a complement to general anesthesia for elective abdominal hysterectomy, is an approach applied to achieve balanced and multimodal analgesia. Thus, while the adverse effects of high doses, especially opioid analgesics, applied with a single method are reduced, more effective treatment can be provided for postoperative pain where drugs and other methods alone are insufficient to provide complete analgesia.

Official title: The Effect of Two Different Analgesic Techniques on Postoperative Recovery Quality in Patients Undergoing Elective Abdominal Hysterectomy

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

70

Start Date

2025-05-25

Completion Date

2026-06-01

Last Updated

2025-05-30

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

intrathecal morphine

Preoperatively, patients will be injected with 200 μg morphine intrathecally with a 27G pencil point spinal needle at the L4-L5 or L3-L4 intervertebral space in a sitting position.

OTHER

Erector Spinae Plane Block

Preoperatively, patients will be placed in the prone position before the operation and an ESPB block will be applied bilaterally at the T9 vertebra level with the help of USG. 0.25% bupivacaine 20 ml will be used bilaterally as the blocking fluid.

Locations (1)

Ataturk University

Erzurum, Yakutiye, Turkey (Türkiye)