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Completed
NCT03504462
Feasibility of Specific Anesthesia of the Forefoot Preserving the Sensitivity of the Heel for Foot Surgery
Conditions: Hallux Valgus and Bunion (Disorder), Morton Neuroma, Metatarsal Fracture, Ingrown Nail, Foot Wound, Foot Infection
Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – N/A
Healthy volunteers: No
Phase: NA
Enrollment: 27
Sponsor: CMC Ambroise Paré
Location: CMC Ambroise Paré Neuilly-sur-Seine Île-de-France Region
Summary
Foot surgery is a painful surgery that is usually scheduled in outpatients. A good management of analgesia is the crucial point. Regional anesthesia (RA) is the gold standard, that provides good anesthesia and a long duration of analgesia. The sciatic nerve block (or its branches) is the most adapted analgesic technique.
Limitation of proximal sciatic block is the motor block of the ankle and results in the impossibility, for the patient, to walk during the early post-operative period. Distal block of the sciatic nerve (tibial and fibular nerve blocks), at the level of the ankle, has been proposed to maintain the mobility of the ankle, to make deambulation with crutches easier. Nevertheless, the lack of sensibility of the heel remains a limitation for early walking, even with adapted shoes (ie : Barouk).
A specific anesthesia of the distal part of the foot, respecting the heel, could be the best option to provide an early deambulation and a suitable analgesia.
Ultrasound identification and specific anesthesia of the branches supplying the distal part of the foot (medial and lateral plantar nerves) could meet this dual objective : good anesthesia and suitable analgesia for early deambulation.
This study is a feasibility study of a specific block of the plantar branches of the tibial nerve, to preserve the sensibility of the heel, in case of foot surgery. The safety of the procedure will be assessed according to the rate of postoperative dysesthesia.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* Patients undergoing a foot surgery
* Consent for participation
* Affiliation to the french social security system
Exclusion Criteria:
* Patient's refusal
* Existence of major spontaneous or acquired haemostatic disorders
* Infection at the point of puncture
* Allergy to local anesthetic or analgesic
* Pregnant or likely to be pregnant
* Patients under protection of the adults (guardianship, curator or safeguard of justice)
* Patients whose cognitive state does not allow assessment by the scales used
* Neuropathic disease
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03504462). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.