1. Analgesic Control after Hip Arthroscopy: A Randomised, Double-Blinded Trial Comparing Portal with Intra-Articular Infiltration of Bupivacaine
- Author
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Kevin J. Mulhall, Joseph F. Baker, Damien P. Byrne, Ciara M. McGuire, Kim Hunter, and Nick Eustace
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual analogue scale ,Analgesic ,Injections, Intra-Articular ,law.invention ,Arthroscopy ,Intra articular ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Anesthetics, Local ,Bupivacaine ,Analgesics ,Pain, Postoperative ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Regimen ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Hip Joint ,Hip arthroscopy ,Joint Diseases ,business ,Infiltration (medical) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The optimum anaesthetic and analgesic management following hip arthroscopy is yet to be determined. There is, in addition, some concern over the use of intraarticular local anaesthetic. We compared the analgesic efficacy of intra-articular infiltration compared with portal infiltration of bupivacaine following hip arthroscopy. Patients were randomised to receive either 10ml of 0.25% bupivacaine either into the joint or around the portal sites following completion of surgery. 73 patients were recruited (40 intra-articular). The portal infiltration group required significantly more rescue analgesia immediately after surgery (2.33mg vs.0.57mg, p=0.036). Visual Analogue Scale pain scores were not significantly different at 1 and 2 hours following surgery, but at 6 hours the portal group had significantly lower VAS scores (p=0.0036). We believe that the initial pain following surgery results from capsular injury and this explains the need for more rescue analgesia in the portal infiltration group. Further work is needed to establish the ideal regimen. A combination of portal and intra-articular infiltration may be the most efficacious.
- Published
- 2011
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