Background
Abdominoplasty is a common aesthetic surgery. Adequate pain management during the postoperative period is of great importance. Previous studies have failed to achieve safe and reliable effective analgesic techniques beyond the recovery room. This research aims to investigate the outcome of the abdominoplasty operation for the patients' received transversus abdominis plan block in comparison with the non-blocked patients.
Methods
58 patients, undergoing elective abdominoplasty, received general anesthesia. Patients were randomly assigned to two equal groups of 29 patients each. Combined subcostal and posterior transversus abdominis plane block group and non-blocked group. For both groups, the standard postoperative analgesic regimen consisted of IV Paracetamol 1 g every 6 hours. Values of visual analog scale values were recorded every 4 hours postoperatively, once the patient had a visual analog scale ≥ 6, IV narcotics administered and visual analog scale recorded every 30 min till pain improved.
Results
there’s a significant difference between both groups regarding the visual analog scale data, patient ambulation, patients’ need for postoperative mechanical ventilatory support, and also the dosage of narcotics used.
Conclusion
Transversus abdominis plane block is a promising regional anesthetic technique for postoperative pain relief in abdominoplasty surgery, it offers a longer postoperative analgesic effect duration and fewer analgesic requirements with less postoperative complications.
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