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Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND: Established or acquired loss of parasympathetic vagal tone is associated with complications, including pain, after noncardiac surgery. We describe a study protocol designed to test the hypothesis that transcutaneous auricular nerve stimulation may preserve efferent parasympathetic activi...

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Autores principales: Patel, Amour B.U., Bibawy, Phillip P.W.M., Majeed, Zehra, Gan, Weng Liang, Ackland, Gareth L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9258962/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35832337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2022.100017
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author Patel, Amour B.U.
Bibawy, Phillip P.W.M.
Majeed, Zehra
Gan, Weng Liang
Ackland, Gareth L.
author_facet Patel, Amour B.U.
Bibawy, Phillip P.W.M.
Majeed, Zehra
Gan, Weng Liang
Ackland, Gareth L.
author_sort Patel, Amour B.U.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Established or acquired loss of parasympathetic vagal tone is associated with complications, including pain, after noncardiac surgery. We describe a study protocol designed to test the hypothesis that transcutaneous auricular nerve stimulation may preserve efferent parasympathetic activity to reduce pain and morbidity after noncardiac surgery. METHODS: Participants aged >18 yr scheduled for urgent/elective orthopaedic surgery (n=86) will be randomly allocated to bilateral transcutaneous auricular nerve stimulation or sham protocol for 50 min at the same time of day, before and 24 h after surgery. Holter monitoring, the analysis of which is masked to allocation, will quantify autonomic modulation of HR. The primary outcome will be pain, quantified by absolute changes in VAS 24 h after surgery following sham or stimulation. Secondary outcomes include presence or absence of >10 mm change in the 100 mm VAS (which defines a minimum clinically important change) and postoperative morbidity (Postoperative Morbidity Survey) before and 24 h after surgery. The relationship between the explanatory variable (HR variability), VAS, and morbidity will be examined using a multilevel (mixed-error component) regression model. Safety and complications of the intervention will also be recorded. The study was approved by the NHS Research Ethics Committee (21/LO/0272). As of 25 December 2021, 34/86 participants (mean [standard deviation] age: 48 [19] yr; 14 females [41.2%]) have been recruited, with complete collection of Holter data. CONCLUSIONS: This phase 2b study will explore whether noninvasive autonomic neuromodulation may reduce pain or morbidity using trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation, providing proof-of-concept data for a non-pharmacological, generalisable approach to improve perioperative outcomes. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: Researchregistry7566.
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spelling pubmed-92589622022-07-11 Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial Patel, Amour B.U. Bibawy, Phillip P.W.M. Majeed, Zehra Gan, Weng Liang Ackland, Gareth L. BJA Open Clinical Trial Protocol BACKGROUND: Established or acquired loss of parasympathetic vagal tone is associated with complications, including pain, after noncardiac surgery. We describe a study protocol designed to test the hypothesis that transcutaneous auricular nerve stimulation may preserve efferent parasympathetic activity to reduce pain and morbidity after noncardiac surgery. METHODS: Participants aged >18 yr scheduled for urgent/elective orthopaedic surgery (n=86) will be randomly allocated to bilateral transcutaneous auricular nerve stimulation or sham protocol for 50 min at the same time of day, before and 24 h after surgery. Holter monitoring, the analysis of which is masked to allocation, will quantify autonomic modulation of HR. The primary outcome will be pain, quantified by absolute changes in VAS 24 h after surgery following sham or stimulation. Secondary outcomes include presence or absence of >10 mm change in the 100 mm VAS (which defines a minimum clinically important change) and postoperative morbidity (Postoperative Morbidity Survey) before and 24 h after surgery. The relationship between the explanatory variable (HR variability), VAS, and morbidity will be examined using a multilevel (mixed-error component) regression model. Safety and complications of the intervention will also be recorded. The study was approved by the NHS Research Ethics Committee (21/LO/0272). As of 25 December 2021, 34/86 participants (mean [standard deviation] age: 48 [19] yr; 14 females [41.2%]) have been recruited, with complete collection of Holter data. CONCLUSIONS: This phase 2b study will explore whether noninvasive autonomic neuromodulation may reduce pain or morbidity using trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation, providing proof-of-concept data for a non-pharmacological, generalisable approach to improve perioperative outcomes. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: Researchregistry7566. Elsevier 2022-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9258962/ /pubmed/35832337 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2022.100017 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Clinical Trial Protocol
Patel, Amour B.U.
Bibawy, Phillip P.W.M.
Majeed, Zehra
Gan, Weng Liang
Ackland, Gareth L.
Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title_full Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title_short Trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
title_sort trans-auricular vagus nerve stimulation to reduce perioperative pain and morbidity: protocol for a single-blind analyser-masked randomised controlled trial
topic Clinical Trial Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9258962/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35832337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2022.100017
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