Patient-Titrated Automated Intermittent Boluses of Local Anesthetic vs. a Continuous Infusion Via a Perineural Catheter for Postoperative Analgesia
Pain, Acute Postoperative, Trauma Injury
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Acute Postoperative
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- patients undergoing ulnar and/or radial fracture open reduction internal fixation or painful foot and/or ankle surgery with a planned infraclavicular or popliteal sciatic perineural catheter, respectively, for postoperative analgesia
Exclusion Criteria:
- daily opioid use within the previous 4 weeks
- clinical neuro-muscular deficit of either the brachial plexus (infraclavicular) or sciatic nerve (sciatic catheters) and its branches and/or innervating muscles
- morbid obesity [body mass index > 35 kg/m2]
- surgery outside of the ipsilateral sciatic and saphenous nerve distributions for sciatic catheters [e.g., iliac crest bone graft]
- pregnancy
- incarceration
Sites / Locations
- UCSD Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Experimental
Continuous Infusion
Titratable Automated Boluses
Patients will receive a continuous infusion of Ropivacaine 0.2% (6 mL/hr popliteal-sciatic and 8 mL/hr infraclavicular, 4 mL patient controlled bolus with 30-minute lockout).
Patients will receive patient-titratable intermittent boluses of Ropivacaine 0.2% (8 mL popliteal-sciatic or 11 mL infraclavicular automated bolus every 120 minutes, 4 mL patient controlled bolus with 30-minute lockout).