Over the last two decades, perioperative analgesia has evolved. Spinal and epidural anaesthesia, once common, have been gradually phased out due to their side effects. The femoral block combined with the sciatic block, possibly with a perineural catheter, is now the gold standard for ensuring prolonged, high-quality analgesia. However, these blocks can cause muscle weakness in the quadriceps, limiting patients' functional recovery. To optimise functional rehabilitation, recent techniques favour more distal and selective blocks, such as the adductor canal (saphenous) block and the iPACK, which allow effective anaesthesia to be maintained whilst preserving motor function. However, these blocks do not always guarantee complete analgesia and may require additional blocks. The hypothesis of the current study is based on the idea that a proximal block targeting the femoral, obturator and sciatic nerves, administered with a low concentration of naropeine (0.1%), could provide more effective analgesia than a 0.5% saphenous iPACK block, whilst preserving motor function The originality of our approach in the current study lies in the use of dissociative proximal blocks performed with low concentrations of local anaesthetics, aimed at effectively covering the innervation of the knee whilst preserving motor function. The expected outcomes of this research are to optimise analgesic management for patients undergoing functional orthopaedic knee surgery, to promote early postoperative walking rehabilitation, to reduce the risk of chronic pain following knee arthroplasty, and to provide evidence to guide anaesthetic and post-surgical rehabilitation practices
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Total morphine consumption in the postoperative period at 72 hours during the hospital stay
Timeframe: from knee surgery (enrollment) to 3 days post-surgery