post laparoscopic pain control using local anesthesia through laparoscopic port sites

Authors

seyyed amir vejdan burn and general surgery wards, imam reza hospital, university of medicine, birjand, iran

malihe khosravi tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran

ghodratoolah naseh burn and general surgery wards, imam reza hospital, university of medicine, birjand, iran

abstract

background: severe abdominal pain is not common after laparoscopic surgeries, but acute or chronic pain after operation is considerable in some patients. post-operative pain control after laparoscopic surgeries, is conventionally achieved using analgesics such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (nsaids) and narcotics, but their administration has a lot of side effects. this study compares the efficacy and side effects of local anesthetic drugs versus conventional analgesics in post-operative pain control. materials and methods: this prospective investigation was conducted into two groups of patients (n=93). group 1, as control group, was given conventional analgesics such as narcotics and nsaids. in investigational group, at the end of laparoscopic surgery, prior to port withdrawal, a local anesthetic mixture, a short acting (lidocaine 2%) plus a long acting (bupivacaine 0.5%) is instilled through the port lumen between the abdominal wall layers. the efficacy of both types of medications was compared to their efficacy and side effects. results: 85% of the control group, received 5 to 20 ml morphine for pain control while the others were controlled with trans-rectal nsaids. in the treatment group, the pain of 65% of the patients was controlled only by local anesthetic drugs, 30% required nsaids and the other 5% required narcotics administration for pain control. conclusion: the administration of local anesthetic drugs after laparoscopic surgery is an effective method for pain control with a low complications rate and side effects of narcotics.

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Journal title:
novelty in biomedicine

جلد ۲، شماره ۳، صفحات ۱۰۲-۱۰۶

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