Abstract

In orthopedic surgeries, there has been an increase in the usage of the neuraxial blockade to provide excellent surgical conditions and prolonged postoperative analgesia. The introduction of the sequential combined spinal epidural anesthesia (SCSEA) technique provides benefits for both spinal anesthesia (SA) and epiduralanesthesia. The focus of this study was to analyze the time needed to attain a desired level of sensory block, to compare the period of sensory block, and to study the intraoperative hemodynamics in the SCSEA and SA groups. The study was conducted on patients admitted for elective lower limb orthopedic surgeries. The sample size for this prospective randomized study is two groups of 67 subjects each. Patients aged between 18 and 65 years, posted for orthopedic surgeries for two to three hours, and of American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) Grades 1 and 2 were included and divided into two groups. Group A patients received SCSEA with an epidural-test dose of 3 ml lignocaine (2%) with adrenaline and spinal bupivacaine (0.5%) of 1.5 ml-7.5 mg + fentanyl .25 mic if the sensory level was below T8. An epidural top-up was given with 2 ml per segment of 0.5% bupivacaine to bring the sensory level to T8. Group B patients received SA with spinal bupivacaine (0.5%) of 3 ml-15 mg + fentanyl .25 mic. Intraoperative hemodynamics, the duration to achieve a sensory level of T8, the time for two-segment regression of sensory block, and the complications that occurred were recorded. The study included a total of 134 subjects with each group having 67 subjects admitted for lower limb surgery. The mean value (SD) of the time taken to attain sensory block in the SCSEA group was prolonged when compared to the SA group (7.15 ± 0.75 and 5.01 ± 0.88). The time for two-segment regression in the SCSEA group was 86.77 ± 3.60and the SA group was 106.4 ± 8.01, which indicated that the SA group has a longer and better sensory block. Substantially, the study shows that the SCSEA group (P< 0.05) has better hemodynamics when compared to the SA group. The SCSEA technique has better intraoperative hemodynamic stability with a longer analgesic effect when compared to SA. SA shows a sudden change in hemodynamics but reveals a greatersensory block.

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