buprenorphine and Hypesthesia

buprenorphine has been researched along with Hypesthesia* in 1 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for buprenorphine and Hypesthesia

ArticleYear
Extended Perineural Analgesia After Hip and Knee Replacement When Buprenorphine-Clonidine-Dexamethasone Is Added to Bupivacaine: Preliminary Report from a Randomized Clinical Trial.
    Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.), 2020, 11-01, Volume: 21, Issue:11

    We tested the hypothesis that buprenorphine-clonidine-dexamethasone (BCD) extends perineural analgesia compared with plain bupivacaine (BPV) nerve blocks used for hip and knee replacement surgery.. Prospective, parallel-arms, randomized, double-blind trial.. A single veterans' hospital.. Seventy-eight veterans scheduled for total hip or knee replacement with plans for spinal as the primary anesthetic.. Participants underwent nerve/plexus blocks at L2-L4 and L4-S3 in advance of hip or knee joint replacement surgery. Patients were randomized to receive BPV-BCD or plain BPV in a 4:1 allocation ratio. Patients answered four block duration questions (listed below). Time differences between treatments were analyzed using the t test.. Significant (P < 0.001) prolongation of the time parameters was reported by patients after the BPV-BCD blocks (N = 62) vs plain BPV (N = 16). The time until start of postoperative pain was 26 vs 11 hours (mean difference = 15 hours, 95% CI = 8 to 21). The time until no pain relief from the blocks was 32 vs 15 hours (mean difference = 17 hours, 95% CI = 10 to 24). The time until the numbness wore off was 37 vs 21 hours (mean difference = 16 hours, 95% CI = 8 to 23). The time until the worst postoperative pain was 39 vs 20 hours (mean difference = 19 hours, 95% CI = 11 to 27).. BPV-BCD provided 26-39 hours of perineural analgesia in the L2-L4 and L4-S3 nerve distributions after hip/knee replacement surgery, compared with 11-21 hours for plain BPV.

    Topics: Analgesia; Anesthetics, Local; Bupivacaine; Buprenorphine; Clonidine; Dexamethasone; Double-Blind Method; Humans; Hypesthesia; Pain Measurement; Pain, Postoperative; Prospective Studies

2020