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BJA Advance Access published online on February 3, 2009

British Journal of Anaesthesia, doi:10.1093/bja/aep004
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© The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia 2009. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Thoracic epidural analgesia in post-thoracotomy patients: comparison of three different concentrations of levobupivacaine and sufentanil

C. Mendola1, D. Ferrante2, E. Oldani1, G. Cammarota1, G. Cecci1, R. Vaschetto1 and F. Della Corte1,*

1 Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, SCDU Anaesthesia and Intensive Care 1, Maggiore della Carità Hospital, University of Eastern Piedmont ‘A. Avogadro’, Corso Mazzini 18, 28100 Novara, Italy
2 Unit of Medical Statistics and Cancer Epidemiology, CPO Piedmont and University of Eastern Piedmont ‘A. Avogadro’, Novara, Italy

* Corresponding author. E-mail: fdcorte{at}tin.it

Background: Relative effects of dosage, volume and concentration of local anaesthetics used for postoperative thoracic epidural analgesia are still under debate. In this randomized, prospective, double-blinded study, we evaluated the incidence of side-effects such as changes in arterial pressure, postoperative nausea, vomiting, and pruritus in patients admitted for thoracic surgery during continuous thoracic epidural infusion using levobupivacaine and sufentanil mixture in three different volumes.

Methods: We studied 150 patients who underwent thoracotomy with a thoracic epidural catheter placed between T4 and T7. The patients were randomized into three groups which received 10 mg h–1 of levobupivacaine at three different concentrations (0.5%, 0.25%, and 0.15%), in combination with sufentanil at 2.6 µg h–1. Haemodynamic effects, pruritus, nausea, vomiting, sensory and motor block, pain score, additional analgesic requirement, sedation, and patient satisfaction were registered immediately after the surgical operation and on the first, second, and third postoperative days.

Results: We did not detect any differences in the incidence of side-effects such as changes in arterial pressure, and also postoperative nausea, vomiting, and pruritus. The three groups were also similar with regard to patient characteristics, sensory and motor block, pain score, analgesic rescue dose, sedation, and patient satisfaction.

Conclusions: The same dose of a mixture of levobupivacaine and sufentanil administered in three different volumes and concentrations during continuous thoracic epidural infusion for thoracotomy provided an equal incidence of adverse haemodynamic effects, nausea, vomiting, or pruritus.

Keywords: anaesthetic techniques, epidural; surgery, thoracic; vomiting, nausea


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