Effect of Esketamine-Based Opioid-Sparing Anesthesia Protocol on the Quality of Early Recovery After Urological Surgery: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

Drug design, development and therapy  – January 01, 2025

Source: PubMed

Summary

A breakthrough in surgical recovery shows that using esketamine during kidney surgery leads to better patient outcomes. This innovative opioid-sparing anesthesia approach resulted in faster recovery times, less postoperative pain, and fewer side effects like nausea. Patients who received esketamine during nephrectomy procedures woke up sooner and reported higher quality of recovery scores compared to traditional methods.

Abstract

The quality of postoperative recovery under enhanced recovery after surgery protocols has always been the focus of anesthesiologists. It has been proven that esketamine application during the perioperative period can reduce the use of opioid drugs and improve the quality of postoperative recovery. The present study explored the effect of the esketamine-based opioid-sparing anesthesia protocol on the quality of postoperative recovery in patients undergoing elective urological surgery. A randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial was adopted. Patients aged 18-65 years, with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status grades I-III, scheduled for elective laparoscopic partial nephrectomy or unilateral nephrectomy in urological surgery, were randomly divided into the OSA group and the control group. The OSA group received 0.25 mg/kg of esketamine for anesthesia induction during the operation, and maintenance was carried out at a rate of 0.125 mg·kg⁻¹·h⁻¹. The primary outcome measure was the Quality of Recovery Scale-15 score 24 hours after the operation. The total Quality of Recovery Scale-15 score was significantly higher in the OSA than in control groups 24 hours after the operation (114 [108, 116] vs 106 [102, 109], p < 0.001). The anesthesia recovery level was better in the OSA than in control groups in the post-anesthesia care unit, demonstrated by shorter eye-opening time (19 [17 20] vs 22 [18, 22], p = 0.031) and extubation time (20 [20, 23] vs 25 [20, 25], p = 0.004). Additionally, the incidence of nausea and vomiting within 0-48 hours after surgery was lower in the OSA than in control groups. The esketamine-based opioid-sparing anesthesia protocol can improve the quality of early postoperative recovery and the level of anesthesia recovery, and accelerate rehabilitation in patients undergoing elective urological surgery.

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