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Comparison of regional vs systemic analgesia for post‐thoracotomy care in infants
Author(s) -
Di Pede Alessandra,
Morini Francesco,
Lombardi Mary H.,
Sgrò Stefania,
Laviani Raoul,
Dotta Andrea,
Picardo Sergio G.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1111/pan.12380
Subject(s) - medicine , thoracotomy , anesthesia , intensive care medicine , surgery
Summary Background In infants, post‐thoracotomy analgesia traditionally consists of systemic opiates, while regional techniques have gained more favor in recent years. We compare the two techniques for thoracotomy in infants. Methods All consecutive patients below 6 months of age who underwent thoracotomy for congenital pulmonary malformations in the study period were retrospectively divided according to the chosen postoperative analgesia: Group S systemic opiates, Group R continuous regional (epidural or extrapleural paravertebral) block. We studied the following outcomes: need for NICU and mechanical ventilation, pain score, requirement for additional analgesics, heart rate 1 h postsurgery, time to pass first stool and to full feed, complications, and duration of hospitalization. Results Forty consecutive patients were included, 19 in Group S and 21 in Group R . Median age at surgery was 89 days (40–110) and 90 days (46–117), respectively. Five of 19 patients in Group S vs none in Group R required postoperative intensive care ( P  = 0.017). Patients in Group R had significantly lower postoperative heart rate (145 [138–150] vs 160 [152–169] b·min −1 , P  = 0.007), earlier passage of first stools (24 h [12–24] vs 36 h [24–48] P  = 0.004), and earlier time to full feed (36 h [24–48] vs 84 h [60–120] P  = 0.0001) than those in Group S. The only observed complication was one catheter dislocation. Conclusion In infants undergoing thoracotomy, loco‐regional analgesia is effective and associated with a reduced intensity of postoperative care and earlier full feeding than systemic analgesia; it should therefore be considered a better option.

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