Nausea, vomiting, sleep, and restfulness upon discharge home after outpatient anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with regional anesthesia and multimodal analgesia/antiemesis
- PMID: 17543813
- PMCID: PMC1940332
- DOI: 10.1016/j.rapm.2006.12.002
Nausea, vomiting, sleep, and restfulness upon discharge home after outpatient anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with regional anesthesia and multimodal analgesia/antiemesis
Abstract
Background and objectives: We analyzed discharge outcome data after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) under spinal anesthesia including a perineural femoral catheter and multimodal analgesia/antiemesis. The outcomes specifically addressed in this report are nausea, vomiting, and retching (NVR) and quality of sleep/difficulty falling asleep/daytime restfulness.
Methods: ACLR patients were randomized to saline or 0.25% levobupivacaine as a bolus and/or 50-hour infusion. Patients completed the Quality of Recovery 40-item (QoR-40) survey on postoperative days 1 to 4. We analyzed predictors of perfect responses (i.e., no NVR and perfect sleep-restfulness) by pooling these specific QoR-40 items. Prospectively collected QoR-40 data were analyzed retrospectively.
Results: Data from 233 participants were analyzed. The addition of the femoral nerve block or perineural catheter did not predict associated improvements in NVR or sleep-restfulness. Previous days' NVR was the most consistent predictor of subsequent NVR, whereas gender and opioid consumption were less consistent predictors. Smoking status was not predictive of NVR. Previous days' sleep-restfulness was a consistent predictor of subsequent sleep-restfulness, whereas the presence of any moderate pain was a less consistent predictor of sleep-restfulness.
Conclusions: NVR and quality of sleep-restfulness after the described regional anesthetic with multimodal analgesia and antiemesis is reported. Smoking status was not a predictor of NVR, and gender and opioid consumption were not consistently predictive of NVR. The addition of a femoral nerve block to the described multimodal technique was not associated with NVR or quality of sleep-restfulness.
Comment in
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Conflicting results in clinical research: is the proof in the P value, the study design, or the pudding?Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2007 May-Jun;32(3):179-82. doi: 10.1016/j.rapm.2007.03.007. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2007. PMID: 17543810 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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"Going fishing"--the practice of reporting secondary outcomes as separate studies.Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2007 May-Jun;32(3):183-5. doi: 10.1016/j.rapm.2007.04.002. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2007. PMID: 17543811 No abstract available.
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