RecruitingN/AOther

Opioid-free Anesthesia as an Alternative to General Anesthesia in Abdominal Surgery

Sponsored by Jagiellonian University

NCT ID
NCT06380244
Target Enrollment
100 participants
Start Date
2024-03-10
Est. Completion
2025-12-31

About This Study

Due to the increasing number of reports of cancer progression in people undergoing surgery under general anesthesia using opioids, OFA is believed to have a favorable long-term prognostic effect, especially in cancer patients. The opioid-free protocol is also used in postoperative analgesia. It is estimated that up to 75% of surgical patients experience chronic postoperative pain, which has a particularly negative impact on the quality of life. The investigators would like to compare pain during the first 48 postoperative hours of patients undergoing abdominal surgery who would be anesthetized with opioids and without opioids (patients would be randomly assigned to a group) (1, 2, 6, 12, 24 and 48 h after operations). A secondary objective will be to measure total oxycodone consumption in the postoperative period in both groups. Other secondary objectives: assessment of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV).

Conditions Studied

Analgesics, OpioidAnesthesia, EndotrachealAnesthesia, General

Interventions

  • anesthesia without opioids

Eligibility

Age:18 Years - 80 Years
Healthy Volunteers:No
View full eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

* Patient's consent to participate in the study
* surgery within the abdominal cavity

Exclusion Criteria:

* patient's refusal to participate in the study
* inability to operate the PCA pump
* not understanding how the NRS scale works
* hypersensitivity to anesthetic drugs
* 1st or 2nd degree heart block.

Study Locations (1)

Jagiellonian University
Krakow, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland

Interested in this trial?

Contact the study team to learn more about eligibility and enrollment.

View on ClinicalTrials.gov
Data Source
ClinicalTrials.gov

Last updated from source

Opioid-free Anesthesia as an Alternative to General Anesthesia in Abdominal Surgery | Huxley