Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia

Background. Vitrectomy is one of the most common outpatient ophthalmic surgeries. The anesthetic technique used in outpatient surgery should contribute to a faster functional recovery, better pain control, and fewer complications. The aim of this study was to compare peribulbar block and balanced ge...

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Main Authors: Bárbara Gouveia, Leonardo Ferreira, Paula Maia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-01-01
Series:Anesthesiology Research and Practice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3838222
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author Bárbara Gouveia
Leonardo Ferreira
Paula Maia
author_facet Bárbara Gouveia
Leonardo Ferreira
Paula Maia
author_sort Bárbara Gouveia
collection DOAJ
description Background. Vitrectomy is one of the most common outpatient ophthalmic surgeries. The anesthetic technique used in outpatient surgery should contribute to a faster functional recovery, better pain control, and fewer complications. The aim of this study was to compare peribulbar block and balanced general anesthesia, in patients undergoing outpatient vitrectomy. Methods. A prospective cohort study was carried out, including adult patients undergoing ambulatory vitrectomy, between January and February 2018. Peribulbar block or balanced general anesthesia was the independent variable analyzed. Clinical and perioperative variables were evaluated, namely, postoperative pain, nausea, and vomiting in the postoperative period, intraoperative hypotension, patient satisfaction with the anesthetic technique, time to oral diet introduction and to hospital discharge, operating room occupancy time, and pharmacological costs. SPSS® 27 was used for statistical analyses. Results. Twenty-one patients were evaluated, 11 of whom underwent peribulbar block and 10 underwent balanced general anesthesia. Patients undergoing peribulbar block did not experience postoperative pain when compared to patients undergoing balanced general anesthesia (p=0.001). Intraoperative hypotension occurred in 18.2% of patients undergoing peribulbar block and in 70% of those undergoing balanced general anesthesia (p=0.03). Time to oral diet introduction (<1 hour vs. > 2 hours; p<0.05), operating room occupancy time (70 vs. 90 minutes; p=0.027), time to hospital discharge (17 vs. 22.5 hours; p=0.004), and pharmacological costs (4.65 vs. 12.09 euros; p<0.05) were lower in patients undergoing peribulbar block versus balanced general. Conclusions. Peribulbar block seems to meet the criteria of an ideal anesthetic technique in outpatient vitrectomy surgery.
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spelling doaj-art-6d3e28543d5b428b9ecdea01ef377df92025-08-20T02:24:03ZengWileyAnesthesiology Research and Practice1687-69702022-01-01202210.1155/2022/3838222Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General AnesthesiaBárbara Gouveia0Leonardo Ferreira1Paula Maia2Department of AnesthesiologyDepartment of AnesthesiologyDepartment of AnesthesiologyBackground. Vitrectomy is one of the most common outpatient ophthalmic surgeries. The anesthetic technique used in outpatient surgery should contribute to a faster functional recovery, better pain control, and fewer complications. The aim of this study was to compare peribulbar block and balanced general anesthesia, in patients undergoing outpatient vitrectomy. Methods. A prospective cohort study was carried out, including adult patients undergoing ambulatory vitrectomy, between January and February 2018. Peribulbar block or balanced general anesthesia was the independent variable analyzed. Clinical and perioperative variables were evaluated, namely, postoperative pain, nausea, and vomiting in the postoperative period, intraoperative hypotension, patient satisfaction with the anesthetic technique, time to oral diet introduction and to hospital discharge, operating room occupancy time, and pharmacological costs. SPSS® 27 was used for statistical analyses. Results. Twenty-one patients were evaluated, 11 of whom underwent peribulbar block and 10 underwent balanced general anesthesia. Patients undergoing peribulbar block did not experience postoperative pain when compared to patients undergoing balanced general anesthesia (p=0.001). Intraoperative hypotension occurred in 18.2% of patients undergoing peribulbar block and in 70% of those undergoing balanced general anesthesia (p=0.03). Time to oral diet introduction (<1 hour vs. > 2 hours; p<0.05), operating room occupancy time (70 vs. 90 minutes; p=0.027), time to hospital discharge (17 vs. 22.5 hours; p=0.004), and pharmacological costs (4.65 vs. 12.09 euros; p<0.05) were lower in patients undergoing peribulbar block versus balanced general. Conclusions. Peribulbar block seems to meet the criteria of an ideal anesthetic technique in outpatient vitrectomy surgery.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3838222
spellingShingle Bárbara Gouveia
Leonardo Ferreira
Paula Maia
Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
Anesthesiology Research and Practice
title Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
title_full Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
title_fullStr Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
title_full_unstemmed Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
title_short Anesthetic Approach in Ambulatory Vitrectomy: Peribulbar Block vs. Balanced General Anesthesia
title_sort anesthetic approach in ambulatory vitrectomy peribulbar block vs balanced general anesthesia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3838222
work_keys_str_mv AT barbaragouveia anestheticapproachinambulatoryvitrectomyperibulbarblockvsbalancedgeneralanesthesia
AT leonardoferreira anestheticapproachinambulatoryvitrectomyperibulbarblockvsbalancedgeneralanesthesia
AT paulamaia anestheticapproachinambulatoryvitrectomyperibulbarblockvsbalancedgeneralanesthesia