• The bone & joint journal · Sep 2015

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Intra-articular and portal infiltration versus wrist block for analgesia after arthroscopy of the wrist: a prospective RCT.

    • Y Agrawal, K Russon, I Chakrabarti, and A Kocheta.
    • The Rotherham NHS Foundation Trust, Moorgate Road, Rotherham, S60 2UD, UK.
    • Bone Joint J. 2015 Sep 1; 97-B (9): 1250-6.

    AbstractWrist block has been used to provide pain relief for many procedures on the hand and wrist but its role in arthroscopy of the wrist remains unexplored. Chondrotoxicity has been a concern with the intra-articular infiltration of local anaesthetic. We aimed to evaluate and compare the analgesic effect of portal and wrist joint infiltration with a wrist block on the pain experienced by patients after arthroscopy of the wrist. A prospective, randomised, double-blind trial was designed and patients undergoing arthroscopy of the wrist under general anaesthesia as a day case were recruited for the study. Levo-bupivacaine was used for both techniques. The effects were evaluated using a ten-point visual analogue scale, and the use of analgesic agents was also compared. The primary outcomes for statistical analyses were the mean pain scores and the use of analgesia post-operatively. A total of 34 patients (63% females) were recruited to the portal and joint infiltration group and 32 patients (59% males) to the wrist block group. Mean age was 40.8 years in the first group and 39.7 years in the second group (p > 0.05). Both techniques provided effective pain relief in the first hour and 24 hours post-operatively but wrist block gave better pain scores at bedtime on the day of surgery (p = 0.007) and at 24 hours post-operatively (p = 0.006). Wrist block provides better and more reliable analgesia in patients undergoing arthroscopy of the wrist without exposing patients to the risk of chondrotoxicity.©2015 The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery.

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