Comparison of Peritonsillar Infiltration of Tramadol Ketamine and Placebo on Pediatric Posttonsillectomy Pain

Brief Summary

Adenotonsillectomy is one of the most common ambulatory surgical procedures performed to children. Tonsillectomy or adenotonsillectomy have a high incidence of postoperative pain. There is still debate about the optimal analgesia for this common surgical procedure. Different methods have been described and used to reduce pain including; improved intraoperative anesthetic pain regimens, use of corticosteroids, adjustment of surgical technique, and intraoperative local anesthetic injection. Intraoperative local anesthetic is a preventive or preemptive analgesia which is the analgesia given before painful stimuli to prevent the subsequent pain. The main goal of the preventive analgesia is the pain relief with minimum side effects. The role of local anesthetic infiltration in the reduction of postadenotonsillectomy pain is still controversial. The objective of this study is to investigate and compare the effectiveness of preincisional peritonsillar infiltration of ketamine and tramadol for post-operative pain on children following adenotonsillectomy. This is prospective, double-blinded randomized study.

Intervention / Treatment

Patientes will be seleted to receive peritonsillar injection of Tramadol, Ketamine or Placebo before tonsillectomy prospective, double-blind, placebo controlles
  • Tramadol (DRUG)
    Patients will receive injections in peritonsillar fossa of tramadol (2 mg/kg-2 ml)
  • Ketamine (DRUG)
    Patients will receive injections in peritonsillar fossa of ketamine prior to surgery
  • Placebos (DRUG)
    Patients will receive 2mL of saline solution in peritonsillar fossa prior to surgery

Condition or Disease

  • Sleep Disorder; Breathing-Related
  • Pain, Postoperative
  • Child, Only

Phase

  • Phase 4
  • Study Design

    Study type: INTERVENTIONAL
    Status: Unknown status
    Study results: No Results Available
    Age: 3 Years to 11 Years
    Enrollment: 108 (ESTIMATED)
    Funded by: Other
    Allocation: Randomized
    Primary Purpose: Treatment

    Masking

    Patients admitted for tonsillectomy were randomized into 3 groups by means of sealed envelopes. The envelope selected by the caregiver will be open by the registered nurse, who will prepare the infiltration. Neither the surgeon, anesthesiologist the caregiver nor the patient will see what is inside the envelope. The register of the envelope number and patient data will be done by the statistical group

    TRIPLE:
    • Participant
    • Care Provider
    • Investigator

    Clinical Trial Dates

    Start date: Jul 01, 2017 ESTIMATED
    Primary Completion: Jul 01, 2017 ESTIMATED
    Completion Date: May 01, 2019 ESTIMATED
    Study First Posted: Mar 01, 2017 ACTUAL
    Results First Posted: Aug 31, 2020
    Last Updated: May 01, 2017

    Sponsors / Collaborators

    Responsible Party: N/A

    Adenotonsillectomy is one of the most common ambulatory surgical procedures performed to children. Tonsillectomy or adenotonsillectomy have a high incidence of postoperative pain. There is still debate about the optimal analgesia for this common surgical procedure. Different methods have been described and used to reduce pain including. The main goal of the preventive analgesia is the pain relief with minimum side effects. The role of local anesthetic infiltration in the reduction of postadenotonsillectomy pain is still controversial. Blockage of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) activation and interception of nociceptive in put are important factors to achieve the reduction in subsequent pain. Ketamine hydrochloride is an NMDA receptor antagonist. The blockage of the NMDA channel and analgesic properties are both at subanesthetic doses for the ketamine. Ketamine also prevents central sensitization of nociceptors. Previous studies described the analgesic effect of intravenous application or peritonsillar infiltration of ketamine intraoperatively in children after tonsillectomy. Tramadol is another analgesic and a synthetic opioid of the aminocyclohexanol group which is a central opioid agonist with less respiratory depression compared to morphine. We knew that tramadol has both systemic and local anesthetic effect on peripheral nerves from human and animal studies.

    The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the University. The consents will be taken from all parents. Patients will be randomized from seald envelope into tramadol, ketamine or control (serum physiologic) to receive the preincisional peritonsillar infiltration before the surgery. There will de 36 patients in each group. The study drug is supplied of a liquid identical in color and volume. All surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurses, patients and parents will be blinded to study group until the end of the study All children will receive a premedication including midazolam hydrochloride (0.5 mg/kg; maximum dose, 20 mg) followed by a standard general inhalational anesthetic (50% O2-N2O and 8% sevoflurane). Children also received 0.1 mg/kg of fentanyl citrate and 0.2 mg/kg mivacurium intravenously. After the intubation maintenance anesthesia will be keep with nitrous oxide (50%) in oxygen and sevoflurane. All patients will receive the peritonsillar injection of the study drug before the excision of the anesthesia. Tramadol group will receive 2 mg/kg (2 ml), ketamine group 0.5 mg/kg (2cc), control group 2 ml of serum physiologic. All infiltrations will be through the peritonsillar fossa. For each tonsil 1 ml will be applied to upper pole, lower pole and between the upper and lower pole with 25-G needle. After the infiltration surgeons will wait 3 min for tonsillectomy. The same standard blunt dissection will be performed to all children by the same surgeon. During the operation heart rate oxygen saturation, average blood pressure, respiration rates will be recorded in every 5 min. Operation, anesthesia times will also be recorded. Postoperatively pain, nausea, vomiting, sedation scores, the existence of dysphagia, bleeding were recorded at 2, 6, 12, 24 h postoperatively. Children's pain scores will be measured by using Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).If the pain score is greater than 5, Ibuprofen will be given to children. Pains with the request for analgesic requirements, the time of analgesia requirement, patient satisfaction will be also recorded.

    Data analysis will be performed by using SPSS for Windows. The relationship between categorical variables will be test by Chi-square test and Anova test will be performed to compare groups according to continuous variables. Also LSD test will be used to detect subgroup differences. p Values higher than 0.05 will be considered as significant. Mean and standard deviations and percentages will be given as descriptive statistics.

    Participant Groups

    • Tramadol group will receive 2 mg/kg (2 ml) through the peritonsillar fossa. For each tonsil 1 ml will be applied to upper pole, lower pole and between the upper and lower pole with 25-G needle. The depth of the infiltration will be as superficial as 3 mm of needle injected and ballooned out the submucosal tissues of the tonsillar pillar, intratonsillar injection as avoided.

    • Ketamine group will receive 0.5 mg/kg (2cc) through the peritonsillar fossa. For each tonsil 1 ml will be applied to upper pole, lower pole and between the upper and lower pole with 25-G needle. The depth of the infiltration will be as superficial as 3 mm of needle injected and ballooned out the submucosal tissues of the tonsillar pillar, intratonsillar injection as avoided.

    • Placebo group will receive 2mL of saline solution through the peritonsillar fossa. For each tonsil 1 ml will be applied to upper pole, lower pole and between the upper and lower pole with 25-G needle. The depth of the infiltration will be as superficial as 3 mm of needle injected and ballooned out the submucosal tissues of the tonsillar pillar, intratonsillar injection as avoided.

    Eligibility Criteria

    Sex: All
    Minimum Age: 3
    Maximum Age: 11
    Age Groups: Child
    Healthy Volunteers: Yes

    Inclusion Criteria:

    * Sleep disordered breathing
    * ASA I-II

    Exclusion Criteria:

    * ASA III-IV physical status
    * Coagulation disturbances
    * Presence of relevant drug allergies
    * pulmonary and cardiac diseases
    * Craniofacial anomalies
    * Mental diseases
    * Genetic disorders
    * Peritonsillar abscess formation
    * Regular use of analgesics 24 h prior to surgery

    Primary Outcomes
    • Children will be evaluated by the Visual Analog Scale of pain and children who had received ketamine should be lower scores when compared to children who had received placebo. These children are expected to ask less times for analgesic medication;

    Secondary Outcomes
    • Children will be evaluated by the Visual Analog Scale of pain and children who had received tramadol should be lower scores when compared to children who had received placebo. These children are expected to ask less times for analgesic medication;

    More Details

    NCT Number: NCT03067103
    Other IDs: JASC1
    Study URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03067103
    Last updated: Sep 29, 2023