Comparative study between general anesthesia and sciatic-femoral-obturator blockade as regards analgesia and incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in elderly patients undergoing unilateral total knee replacement

Joint Authors

Sultan, Marwah
al-Sayyidah, Ayman A.
Nabil, Mai M.

Source

Ain Shams Journal of Anesthesiology

Issue

Vol. 9, Issue 3 (30 Sep. 2016), pp.377-386, 10 p.

Publisher

Ain Shams University Faculty of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology

Publication Date

2016-09-30

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

10

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

The aim of this study was to compare the effect of sevoflurane general anesthesia (GA) and sciatic–femoral–obturator blockade as regards analgesia and incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) in elderly patients undergoing unilateral total knee replacement.

Patients and methods Thepatientsweredividedinarandomizedmannerintotwogroups: theGAgroup(n=40) received maintenance of anesthesia with inhalational sevoflurane, and the peripheral nerve block (PNB) group (n=40) underwent sciatic nerve block (40ml), femoral nerve block (20ml), and obturator nerve block (10 ml) with 0.25% bupivacaine.

The following time points were considered: baseline, immediately before induction of anesthesia (Tbaseline), immediately after induction of anesthesia (T-induction), at the end of the operation (T-end) and then at 6, 12, 18, and 24 h postoperatively and were represented as T6, T12, T18, and T24, respectively.

Results A total of 15 of 40 patients from the GA group developed POCD, whereas six of 38 patients in the PNB group developed POCD at T24.

This difference was significant.

Moreover, therewas a significant decrease in Mini-Mental State Examination score in the GA group after 24 h in comparison with the preoperative value.

There was a significantly higher value of Aβ (β-amyloid protein) in theGAgroup comparedwith the PNB group 24 h postoperatively.

Visual analogue score was significantly lower at Tend, T6, T12, T18, and T24 in the PNB group compared with the GA group.

Hemodynamics was significantly lower in the PNB group than in the GA group at T-end, T6, T12, T18, and T24.

Theywere significantly higher in thePNBgroup than in theGAgroup at T-induction.Total opioid consumption within 24 h postoperatively and the incidence of nausea were lower in the PNB group compared with the GA group.

Induction time was significantly longer in the PNB group than in the GA group.

Conclusion The current study demonstrated that PNB with sciatic–femoral–obturator for total knee replacement was accompanied by less POCD, less pain, less nausea, and less opioid consumption within 24 h postoperatively compared with GA with sevoflurane

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Sayyidah, Ayman A.& Sultan, Marwah& Nabil, Mai M.. 2016. Comparative study between general anesthesia and sciatic-femoral-obturator blockade as regards analgesia and incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in elderly patients undergoing unilateral total knee replacement. Ain Shams Journal of Anesthesiology،Vol. 9, no. 3, pp.377-386.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-709971

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Sayyidah, Ayman A.…[et al.]. Comparative study between general anesthesia and sciatic-femoral-obturator blockade as regards analgesia and incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in elderly patients undergoing unilateral total knee replacement. Ain Shams Journal of Anesthesiology Vol. 9, no. 3 (Jul. / Sep. 2016), pp.377-386.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-709971

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Sayyidah, Ayman A.& Sultan, Marwah& Nabil, Mai M.. Comparative study between general anesthesia and sciatic-femoral-obturator blockade as regards analgesia and incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in elderly patients undergoing unilateral total knee replacement. Ain Shams Journal of Anesthesiology. 2016. Vol. 9, no. 3, pp.377-386.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-709971

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 385-386

Record ID

BIM-709971