GET THE APP

The role of local injection of Bupivacaine in the management of pain after tonsillectomy surgery | Abstract
international journal of bioassays.
All submissions of the EM system will be redirected to Online Manuscript Submission System. Authors are requested to submit articles directly to Online Manuscript Submission System of respective journal.

The role of local injection of Bupivacaine in the management of pain after tonsillectomy surgery

Author(s): Fatemeh Javaherforoosh Zadeh, Bita Derakhshandeh, Fahimeh Atigh

Abstract

Pain relief after tonsillectomy is an important part of post-operative management. There are some common drugs and local anesthetics such as bupivacaine used to treat postoperative pain. This research was aimed to assess the role of local injection of bupivacaine in the management of pain after tonsilectomy surgery 96patients aged 5–12 were included in a double-blind clinical trial prospective study. Patients in treatment group received an injection 3cc of 0.5% bupivacaine solution in side and upper peritonsillar areas, and patients in group B were injected 3cc of normal saline in the same area. Patients were asked to Visual Analog Score, After tracheal extubation, 1st, 2th, 4th, 8th,12th, and 24th hours after operation. The first request for analgesic and the total amount of analgesic consumption was also recorded. Regarding to Visual Analog Score over a 24-h period, there was a significant difference between two groups (p<0.05). Also demand for analgesic in 24 hours after surgery was significantly less in treatment group than in placebo (p<0.001). preoperative local 0.5% bupivacaine injection in tonsillectomy patients was effective relieves the post-tonsillectomy pain and significantly reduces opioid consumption in kids.

image 10.21746/ijbio.2016.01.001

Share this article


International Journal of Bioassays is a member of the Publishers International Linking Association, Inc. (PILA), CROSSREF and CROSSMARK (USA). Digital Object Identifier (DOI) will be assigned to all its published content.

International Journal of Bioassays [ISSN: International Journal of Bioassays] is licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
© Copyright 2012-2024. All rights reserved.