Efficacy of Multimodal Periarticular Injections in Operatively Treated Ankle Fractures
Pain, Postoperative, Ankle Fractures
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Postoperative
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- All consenting patients 18 years of age and older with operative, closed, rotational ankle fractures treated with internal fixation.
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients with any of the following:
- Allergy or medical contraindication to any of the study medications
- Pregnant women
- Diagnosed dementia
- Preexisting opioid or illicit drug dependency
- Major neuromuscular deficit
- Severe systemic disorder (heart failure, respiratory failure, kidney failure, liver failure, or a clotting disorder)
- Major head trauma
- Concomitant distracting injury
- Other surgical intervention in the study period (1 week)
- Revision operations
- Insists to receive peripheral nerve blocks for surgical anesthesia
- Refusal to participate
Sites / Locations
- University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Peri-incisional injection
Control
A single, 25 cc multimodal analgesic cocktail will be injected following completion of ankle fracture fixation/instrumentation while the patient remains under general anesthesia and prior to skin closure. The injection will be administered as such: 20 mL injected into the peri-incisional soft tissues in a circumferential fashion 5mL injected into the ankle joint This cocktail includes 200 mg of 0.8% ropivacaine, 0.6 mg of epinephrine, 5 mg of morphine sulfate, and sodium chloride solution. All infiltrations will be completed with a blunt trochar to minimize the risk of intravascular injection. Interventions: Drug: Ropivacaine Drug: Epinephrine Drug: Morphine Drug: 0.9% sodium chloride solution Following surgery, patients in the treatment and non-treatment groups will both be provided with the same intravenous (patient-controlled analgesia) and oral pain medications scheduled "per needed".
Ankle fracture fixation/instrumentation will be completed per the standard of care. No peri-incisional injection will be completed.