| Literature DB >> 26375568 |
ShuYa Mei1, ShuQing Jin1, ZhiXia Chen1, XiBing Ding1, Xiang Zhao1, Quan Li1.
Abstract
Patients frequently experience postoperative pain after a total knee arthroplasty; such pain is always challenging to treat and may delay the patient's recovery. It is unclear whether local infiltration or a femoral nerve block offers a better analgesic effect after total knee arthroplasty.We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials to compare local infiltration with a femoral nerve block in patients who underwent a primary unilateral total knee arthroplasty. We searched Pubmed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library through December 2014. Two reviewers scanned abstracts and extracted data. The data collected included numeric rating scale values for pain at rest and pain upon movement and opioid consumption in the first 24 hours. Mean differences with 95% confidence intervals were calculated for each end point. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to evaluate potential sources of heterogeneity.While the numeric rating scale values for pain upon movement (MD-0.62; 95%CI: -1.13 to -0.12; p=0.02) in the first 24 hours differed significantly between the patients who received local infiltration and those who received a femoral nerve block, there were no differences in the numeric rating scale results for pain at rest (MD-0.42; 95%CI:-1.32 to 0.47; p=0.35) or opioid consumption (MD 2.92; 95%CI:-1.32 to 7.16; p=0.18) in the first 24 hours.Local infiltration and femoral nerve block showed no significant differences in pain intensity at rest or opioid consumption after total knee arthroplasty, but the femoral nerve block was associated with reduced pain upon movement.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26375568 PMCID: PMC4557589 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2015(09)09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection.
Characteristics of eligible trials.
| Author | Year of publication | Anesthesia | Number of patients | Femoral nerve block | Local infiltration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toftdahl K | 2007 | spinal anesthesia | 80 | continuous femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
| Carli F | 2010 | spinal anesthesia | 40 | continuous femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
| Affas F | 2011 | spinal anesthesia | 40 | continuous femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
| Ng FY | 2012 | general anesthesia | 16 | continuous femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
| Meftah M | 2012 | spinal anesthesia | 90 | combine patient-controlled epidural analgesia and femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
| Moghtadaei M | 2014 | spinal anesthesia | 40 | single-injection femoral nerve block | local infiltration |
Figure 2Risk of bias assessment for included studies.
Figure 3Meta-analysis results of local infiltration compared with femoral nerve block after total knee arthroplasty. (A) NRS value for pain at rest in the first 24 hours; (B) NRS value for pain upon movement in the first 24 hours; (C) opioid consumption (mg) in the first 24 hours.
Figure 4Sensitivity analysis of each end point. (A) NRS value for pain at rest in the first 24 hours; (B) NRS value for pain upon movement in the first 24 hours; (C) opioid consumption (mg) in the first 24 hours.