The Degree of Recuperation and Compliance in Orthopedic Surgery (Including Facial Graft, Fracture Fixation, Arthroscopic surgery, Mass excision, Deformity correction surgery) between Spinal Anesthesia and Nerve Block
The purpose of our research was to examine the level of recovery and adherence among spinal anesthetic and nerve block in orthopedic procedures. 88 individuals between the ages of 18 and 60 who were undergoing spinal anesthesia or combination sciatic-femoral nerve block (CSFNB) participated in the research study. Individuals were split into two categories according to the form of anesthetic used in the research, which had been approved by the medical facility's ethics committee. The QoR-15K score, postoperative vital signs, pain, side effects, timing of urination, pain, and mobility towards the conclusion of the operation were all used in the research to gauge how satisfied patients were with anesthesia. Physical comfort, emotional state, psychological support, physical independence, and physiological side effects are all measured by the QoR-15K, a thorough evaluation tool. The student t test and the test for Chi-square were used to assess the results. Comparisons were made between continuous parameters such as PCA usage, patient satisfaction, and QoR-15K. For all statistical investigations, SPSS v27 was used. Before surgery QoR-15 K, PCA intake, pain levels, and patient characteristics, operation time, and procedure type didn't vary significantly among both groups, according to the research. Pain, mobility, and the amount of time after operation before urinating were comparable. A single patient and eleven others complained of backache. The two categories experienced equal levels of nausea, vomiting, headache, dizziness, local responses, and numbness in their legs. It has been determined that in orthopedic procedures, nerve blocks may offer greater physical independence and satisfaction than spinal anesthesia.