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Sacral Canal Block for Hip Replacement the Efficacy and Safety of Controlled Intraoperative Hypotension

Sacral Canal Block for Hip Replacement the Efficacy and Safety of Controlled Intraoperative Hypotension

Recruiting
45 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

To observe the efficacy and safety of sacral canal block in controlled blood pressure reduction during hip replacement in the elderly, and to provide a better option for controlled blood pressure reduction during clinical hip surgery.

Description

Confirm the effectiveness of sacral canal block in controlled blood pressure reduction during hip replacement surgery in the elderly.

The patient underwent sacral canal block 30 minutes before the operation. The time from the start of the block to achieving the target blood pressure for controlled blood pressure reduction, the duration of the target blood pressure, and the blood pressure variability at different time points were observed. The blood pressure variability was used to evaluate the effect of controlled blood pressure reduction during the operation, the intraoperative blood loss, and the surgeon's satisfaction. It has been confirmed that sacral canal block can effectively achieve the purpose of controlled blood pressure reduction in hip replacement surgery for the elderly.

Clarify the safety of sacral canal block for controlled hypotension in hip replacement surgery.

The patient underwent sacral canal block 30 minutes before the operation. Observe from the start of the block to the regression of the block plane, and the patient was lowered Limb tissue oxygen saturation, peripheral perfusion index, unexpected hypotension, heart rate variability, pulse oxygen saturation, and whether there are complications related to sacral canal block such as local anesthetic poisoning, general spinal anesthesia, regional nerve injury, epidural hematoma, puncture site infection, etc. Meanwhile, the general information of the patients was recorded, including the duration of the operation, the consumption of opioids during the operation, the postoperative pain score, the incidence of nausea and vomiting, and the recovery of sensorimotor sensation in the postoperative block plane regression of the patients, etc. It is clear that sacral canal block can be safely used for controlled blood pressure reduction during hip replacement surgery in the elderly.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Over 45 years old;
  2. ASA Grade II - III;
  3. BMI 18-35kg/㎡;
  4. Agree to participate in this study and sign the informed consent form.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Those who refuse to participate in the experiment;
  2. Those who suffer from language or hearing impairments and are unable to communicate;
  3. Those with contraindications for sacral canal block.

Study details
    Postoperative Pain

NCT07064434

General Hospital of Ningxia Medical University

23 July 2025

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