The Effect of Intrathecal Morphine and Erector Spina Plan Block on Serum Cytokine Levels and Chronic Pain in Caesarean Section Surgery

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ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT06684015
Sponsor Ankara University
Information provided by Fatih Kurt, Ankara University (Responsible Party)
Last Update Posted 2024-11-12

Study Overview

Brief Summary

Working Title The Effect of Intrathecal Morphine and Erector Spina Plan Block on Serum Cytokine Levels and Chronic Pain in Caesarean Section Surgery

Study Description This study aims to evaluate the effects of intrathecal morphine added as an adjuvant to local anesthesia during spinal anesthesia and the erector spinae plane block applied at the end of cesarean surgery on postoperative serum cytokine levels, pain intensity, need for rescue analgesia, hospital anxiety and depression levels, quality of obstetric recovery, and the development of chronic postoperative pain.

Study Type Study Design: Observational Model: Two parallel groups Time Perspective: Prospective

Interventions Intervention Type: Drug and Block Procedure Details: In patients included in the study, intrathecal morphine is administered as an adjuvant to local anesthesia during spinal anesthesia first group. At the end of surgery, an erector spinae plane block is performed other group.

Primary Outcome Measures Serum Cytokine Levels Time Frame: 0., 6. and 24. Hours Assessment Method: Serum biochemical analyses

Pain Intensity and Need for Rescue Analgesia Time Frame: 2., 4., 6., 12. and 24. hours, assessed using the Numeric Rating Scale(NRS)

Hospital Anxiety and Depression Levels Time Frame: Preoperative and at 24 hours postoperatively Assessment Method: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)

Quality of Obstetric Recovery Score Time Frame: At 24 hours postoperatively

Chronic Postoperative Pain Development Time Frame: Evaluated at 4 months postoperatively Assessment Method: Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2