Journal of Behçet Uz Children's Hospital (Aug 2020)
Quadratus Lumborum Block versus Wound Infiltration for Pediatric Unilateral Inguinal Hernia Repair; A Prospective, Randomized Study
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The inguinal hernia repair has an important place among the lower abdominal surgeries regarding the daily pediatric surgery practice. This study was aimed to compare the postoperative analgesic effects of the surgical wound infiltration and transmuscular quadratus lumborum (TQL) in inguinal hernia surgery in the pediatric age group. METHODS: After ethical board approval 50 patients between the ages of 2 months and 7 years ungoing elective unilateral inguinal hernia repair were randomized to TQL block (Group TQL, n=26) or to wound infiltration (Group I, n=24). Group TQL received ultrasound- guided transmuscular quadratus lumborum block with 0.25% bupivacaine 0.5 ml/kg and Group I received wound infiltration with 0.25% bupivacaine 0.5 ml/kg before surgery. Pain scores (FLACC), parental satisfication, block complications and additional analgesia requirements were recorded. RESULTS: It was determined a significant decrease in the FLACC pain scores in the TQL group for the 2nd (p0.05). The paracetamol requirement was statistically lower in the Group TQL than Group I (6/20 vs 14/10 respectively, p=0.020). There was no statistically difference between groups for fentanyl consumption (p>0.05). There was no statistically significant difference between the groups regarding the parental satisfaction evaluation. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: This study evaluated TQL was reported to provide effective analgesic activity in the first hours after surgery and decrease analgesic consumption in patients. We believe that TQL is an analgesic solution alone compared to infiltration analgesia in pediatric inguinal hernia surgery.
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