Stopped: The study has been stopped due to logistical reasons at the clinical site.
Total knee arthroplasty is an effective surgical intervention for patients with chronic osteoarthritis commonly performed worldwide. Postoperative pain management has been a key focus in patient care for this procedure. Poorly controlled pain following total knee arthroplasty is associated with decreased ambulation, increased length of hospital stay, increased complications (particularly related to significant opioid use), and overall suboptimal patient recovery. Appropriate postoperative pain management utilizing motor sparing peripheral nerve blocks and periarticular injections has been shown to provide faster, more optimized patient recovery and reduced hospital length of stay in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty. Adductor canal block (ACB) is a well-studied peripheral nerve block performed for analgesia following total knee arthroplasty. ACB is an effective component of multimodal analgesia providing improved pain control to the peripatellar and intra-articular aspect of the knee joint while largely preserving the strength of the quadriceps muscles1. In addition, perioperative local infiltration analgesia (LIA) performed by the orthopaedic surgical team is a common practice that has been shown to improve short-term postoperative pain relief and reduce total systemic opioid consumption during hospital stay2 for total knee arthroplasty. The Infiltration between the Popliteal Artery and Capsule of the Knee (iPACK) block is a newly described regional anesthesia technique for postoperative analgesia in total knee arthroplasty, performed under ultrasound guidance. It targets the articular branches of the tibial, common peroneal, and obturator nerves in the popliteal region, and aims to provide analgesia to the posterior aspect of the knee joint without compromising lower extremity motor function following total knee arthroplasty. This study aims to determine whether the IPACK block provides additional analgesia (in combination with ACB + LIA) for total knee arthroplasty surgeries. The study will examine how much additional analgesia IPACK provides in the context of an already-optimized regional anesthesia pathway for total knee arthroplasty, which uses ACB + LIA, both modalities that have reasonable existing evidence.
Age range
18 Years – 80 Years
Sex
ALL
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Comparing pain scores using the visual analogue scale between 2 groups
Timeframe: 4 hours after surgery
Comparing pain scores using the visual analogue scale between 2 groups
Timeframe: 24 hours after surgery
Comparing total opioid consumption between 2 groups
Timeframe: During 24 hours after surgery
Comparing total length of hospital stay
Timeframe: 20-48 hours after surgery
Timed Up and Go test results
Timeframe: pre-intervention
Timed Up and Go test results
Timeframe: Up to 24 hours after surgery
Comparing knee Range of Motion (ROM)
Timeframe: pre-intervention
Comparing knee Range of Motion (ROM)
Timeframe: Up to 24 hours after surgery
Comparing patient satisfaction using Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC)
Timeframe: Up to 24 hours after surgery
Comparing patient satisfaction using Knee Society Scoring (KSS)
Timeframe: Up to 24 hours after surgery