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Bilateral Ultrasound Guided Intramuscular Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block Versus Bilateral Lateral Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block in Controlling Postoperative Pain in Cancer Patients Undergoing Open Nephrectomy

Bilateral Ultrasound Guided Intramuscular Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block Versus Bilateral Lateral Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block in Controlling Postoperative Pain in Cancer Patients Undergoing Open Nephrectomy

Recruiting
18-65 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of bilateral ultrasound-guided intramuscular quadratus lumborum plane block (QL4) versus bilateral lateral quadratus lumborum plane block (QL1) in controlling postoperative pain in cancer patients undergoing open nephrectomy.

Description

Post-surgical somatic pain is very distressing to patients, which may lead to significant complications.

Practitioners initially used these as ilioinguinal, iliohypogastric, rectus sheath blocks, and in the early 21st century, transversus abdominis plane (TAP) blocks. A recent variation of the TAP block is known as the quadratus lumborum block (QLB).

The QL block effectiveness is believed to result from the spread of Local Anesthetic cranially from the lumbar deposition into the thoracic paravertebral space (TPVS). So, the QLB seems to relieve somatic and visceral pains.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age from 18 to 65 years.
  • Both sexes.
  • American Society of Anesthesiology (ASA) physical status II-III.
  • Body mass index (BMI): (20- 40) kg/m2.
  • Type of surgery: midline incision for unilateral open nephrectomy.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patient refusal.
  • Age <18 years or >65 years
  • BMI <20 kg/m2 and > 40 kg/m2
  • Known sensitivity or contraindication to drugs used in the study
  • Contraindication to regional anesthesia, e.g. local infection at the introduction site, pre-existing peripheral neuropathies and coagulopathy.
  • Physical status ASA IV
  • Patients on chronic analgesic therapy (daily morphine ≥30 mg or equivalent dose of other opioids or tramadol or any medication for neuropathic pain)
  • Patients with a history of drug abuse
  • Patients with neuropsychiatric diseases; patients with a history of chronic pain syndromes that may enhance sensitivity to pain, for example, fibromyalgia
  • All patients who are going to have severe intra- or post-operative bleeding or will require postoperative mechanical ventilation are also excluded from the study.

Study details
    Bilateral
    Ultrasound
    Intramuscular Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block
    Lateral Quadratus Lumborum Plane Block
    Postoperative Pain
    Cancer Patients
    Open Nephrectomy

NCT06889987

National Cancer Institute, Egypt

16 September 2025

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