Efficacy of Peri-Incisional Multimodal Drug Injection Following Operative Management of Femur Fractures
Pain, Postoperative, Femur Fracture
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Postoperative focused on measuring Peri-incisional injection, Multimodal analgesia, Femur fracture
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients who sustained an acute femur fracture in any anatomic region (subcapital, basicervical, intertrochanteric, subtrochanteric, diaphyseal, distal metaphyseal, or distal articular)
- Age ≥18 years
- Indicated for definitive operative management at a single Level 1 trauma center
Exclusion Criteria:
- Revision procedures
- Temporizing procedures (irrigation and debridement, external fixation)
- Regular narcotic use
- Psychiatric illness
- Dementia
- Neuromuscular deficit
- Allergy/intolerance to cocktail ingredients
- Clinical status that precludes verbal pain assessment (e.g. major intracranial trauma)
- 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 (no injection)
A 100 cc multimodal analgesic cocktail will be injected into the superficial and deep peri-incisional tissues after the completion of femur fracture fixation/instrumentation while the patient remains under general anesthesia and prior to wound closure. This cocktail includes 400 mg of 0.75% ropivacaine (53.33 mL), 0.6 mg of 1 mg/mL epinephrine (0.6 mL), 5 mg of 0.5 mg/mL morphine sulfate (10 mL), and 36.07 mL 0.9% sodium chloride solution. All infiltrations will be completed with a blunt trochar to minimize the risk of intravascular injection.
Femur fracture fixation/instrumentation will be completed per the standard of care. No peri-incisional injection will be completed.