• J Reprod Med · Nov 2010

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Ketorolac-mepivacaine lower uterine block for in-office endometrial ablation: a randomized, controlled trial.

    • Hector O Chapa, Alfred G Antonetti, and Ken Bakker.
    • Women's Specialty Center, Dallas, Texas, USA. chapamd@aol.com
    • J Reprod Med. 2010 Nov 1;55(11-12):464-8.

    ObjectiveTo investigate the effectiveness of a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) administered in combination with a local anesthetic as a deep paracervical block for in-office endometrial ablations.Study DesignDouble-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial. Patients received either sublingual ketorolac (30 mg/1 mL) or a mepivacaine-only paracervical injection (standard group) or received sublingual saline (1 mL) and a ketorolac (30 mg/1 mL)-mepivacaine paracervical block (NSAID group)for Gynecare Thermachoice III ablation (Ethicon, Inc., Somerville, New Jersey). All received sublingual ketorolac/placebo and 1 mg alprazolam sublingually 20 minutes preprocedure. Primary outcome was intraoperative pain control measured by 100 mm visual analogue scale. Secondary outcomes were postablation pain control (visual analogue scale [VAS]), postoperative use of narcotic analgesics and patient satisfaction in the first 24 hours (not satisfied, satisfied or very satisfied).ResultsTwenty patients were randomized into each group. No statistically significant difference was noted in overall intraoperative VAS score (p = 0.81), but there was a significant reduction in postoperative VAS (p = 0.01). There was less need for postoperative analgesic use in the first 24 hours (p = 0.02) in the NSAID group. More patients were "very satisfied" in the NSAID group.ConclusionInjectable ketorolac-mepivacaine anesthetic solution functions well as a deep paracervical block for in-office gynecologic procedures, with better postoperative pain control than mepivacaine-alone protocols.

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