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Role of Nerve Block in Management of Multiple Rib Fractures
Sponsor: Assiut University
Summary
* Epidemiology \& Impact Thoracic trauma is a common and serious injury worldwide-especially in developing countries-and carries high rates of morbidity and mortality. Complications arise primarily from hypoventilation, which leads to atelectasis, pneumonia, and respiratory failure. * Key to Reducing Complications: Pain Control Effective analgesia is the cornerstone of preventing respiratory complications. Inadequate pain relief causes patients to splint and hypoventilate, setting the stage for pulmonary collapse and infection. * Conservative Management * Analgesics: Systemic pharmacological pain relief remains the mainstay. * Supportive Measures: Rest, application of ice, and encouragement of deep breathing exercises. * Incentive Spirometry: Promoted in all patients to maintain lung expansion and ward off atelectasis. * Regional Anesthesia Techniques To further improve comfort and respiratory mechanics, ultrasound-guided nerve blocks are employed according to fracture location: * Serratus Anterior Plane Block for anterolateral rib fractures * Thoracic Paravertebral Block for posterior rib fractures * Surgical Intervention Reserved for complex cases-such as flail chest or fractures with risk of organ injury-where stabilization or repair may be necessary. * Identified Gap Despite these options, thoracic surgeons currently lack a standardized, procedure-specific pain management protocol beyond systemic analgesics, highlighting a need for consensus guidelines that integrate pharmacological and regional techniques.
Official title: Management of Multiple Rib Fractures; Role of Nerve Block
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 70 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
74
Start Date
2025-12
Completion Date
2027-04
Last Updated
2025-05-06
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Nerve block with Lidocain
Injection of Lidocaine (7mg/kg) with Epinephrine 1:100000 under Ultrasonographical guidance
pharmacological analgesics
Oral Paracetamol (500mg/6hr), IV Ketolac (15mg/6hr) and IV perfelgan (1gm/6hr)