Abstract

BackgroundThe transversus abdominis plane block is a regional anesthesia technique. Recently, its impact on early chronic pain and the cumulative need of analgesic medication following inguinal hernia repair is being monitored. In terms of effectiveness and patient safety, it remains unclear whether the approach should be conducted preoperatively through ultrasound guidance, or through intraoperative visual guidance.The study at hand aims to provide more evidence on this topic. MethodsA monocentric retrospective matched pair analysis was performed. The intraoperative visual guided and ultrasound guided -transversus abdominis plane block prior to inguinal hernia repair in transabdominal preperitoneal technique were consecutively compared in regard to analgesic effectiveness and complication rate. The data of individuals who were operated on from June 2007 to February 2019 were analyzed. The matching criteria were ASA-Score, Gender, Age ( ±6 years), and hernia size (<1,5 cm, 1,5-3 cm, >1,5 cm). ResultsA total of 116 patients were enrolled. Both groups were homogenous in terms of age, gender contribution, body mass index, ASA-Score, hernia type, and size. The pain score at the postoperative anesthesia care unit was lower in the ultrasound-guided-transversus abdominis plane group without being statistically significant (VAS-Score: 0.67 vs.0.84). Patients of the ultrasound-guided-transversus abdominis plane group received significantly less metamizole on the day of operation (1.29 g (0.96) vs. 1.68 g (0.70), p = 0.015). ConclusionDue to our findings, we assume that the ultrasound-guided-transversus abdominis plane -Block may reduce postoperative pain and analgesic consumption more effectively than the visual-guided-transversus abdominis plane lock. Further prospective clinical trials are mandatory.

Highlights

  • Postoperative pain following laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (IHR) occurs frequently [1]

  • The UG-transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block prior to primary IHR in Transabdominal preperitoneal inguinal hernia repair (TAPP) technique was compared to the intraoperatively through visual-guidance (IVG)-TAP block in terms of analgesic effectiveness, use, and complication rate

  • Primary endpoint: cumulative need medication (CNM) of opioids Patients in the UG-TAP-Block received an average of 10.2 mg

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Summary

Introduction

Postoperative pain following laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (IHR) occurs frequently [1]. Several authors demonstrated that subfascial/subcutaneous local infiltration and anesthetic field blocks reduce early postoperative pain, and the need of analgesic medication following open IHR [4,5]. Regarding laparoscopic IHR (transabdominal preperitoneal (TAPP) and total extraperitoneal (TEP) technique), a total of 6 studies involving 1089 patients demonstrated a statistically compelling transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block impact on pain reduction and painkiller (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The intraoperative visual guided and ultrasound guided -transversus abdominis plane block prior to inguinal hernia repair in transabdominal preperitoneal technique were consecutively compared in regard to analgesic effectiveness and complication rate. Results: A total of 116 patients were enrolled Both groups were homogenous in terms of age, gender contri­ bution, body mass index, ASA-Score, hernia type, and size.

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