A randomized, placebo controlled study: EMLA in minor breast surgery.
Author(s): Akan A, Eryavuz Y, Kamali S, Simşek S, Hot S, Bademci R.
Affiliation(s): Department of General Surgery, Okmeydanı Education and Research Hospital,
Istanbul, Turkey. akanarzu@hotmail.com
Publication date & source: 2012, Minerva Chir. , 67(2):181-5
AIM: Patients undergoing excision for breast lumps prefer general anesthesia or
local anesthesia plus sedation, because of the fear of pain for local anesthesia
alone. The aim of this study is to show the efficacy of an eutectic mixture of
local anesthetic lignocaine and prilocaine (EMLA®) in these patients.
METHODS: This study has been designed randomized, placebo-controlled. Forty five
patients undergoing excision for breast lumps were divided into three groups. The
first group was administered local EMLA cream preoperatively (Group I, N.=15),
the second group (Group II, N.=15) had no preoperative preparation and the third
group was placebo group (Group III, N.=15). All groups underwent the operation
under local anesthesia. Pain during the local anesthesia and three hours after
the operation were assessed using the visual analog scale. The amount of local
anesthetic used during the operation and the anesthetic need of patients after
the operation were assessed.
RESULTS: When the three groups were compared, it was found that the intensity of
pain in the group with EMLA was considerably lower during and after the operation
(P<0.05). The amount of local anesthetic used during the operation was lower
(P<0.05) and the need for post-operative analgesic was also less than the usual
(P<0.05).
CONCLUSION: Topical EMLA use decreases the pain, provides per-operative and
postoperative patient and physician comfort, improved patient's compliance, and
simplifies the surgical procedure. This is the first study demonstrating that a
topical anesthetic provides a non-invasive analgesia during benign breast mass
excision.
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