Clinical Trial: TAP Block vs External Oblique Plane Block for Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Surgery

Study Status: RECRUITING
Recruit Status: RECRUITING
Study Type: INTERVENTIONAL




Official Title: Comparison of Ultrasound-Guided Transversus Abdominis Plane Block (TAP) and External Oblique Plan Block (EOIB) for Postoperative Recovery and Pain Scores After Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Surgery

Brief Summary:

Ultrasound (US) guidedTransversus Abdominis Plane Block (TAPB) is performed by injecting a local anesthetic into the plane between the internal oblique and transverse abdominis muscles and provides analgesia in the anterolateral walls of the abdomen after abdominal surgery.
Ultrasound-guided TAPB has been commonly used for many years.

US-guided External oblique intercostal block (EOIB) is a novel block performed by injection of local anesthetic between the external and internal oblique muscles at the level of 6th-8th ribs.
This block provides abdominal analgesia between T6 and T10 levels.
There are studies in the literature showing that it provides effective analgesia.
However, there is no study comparing TAPB and EOIB yet.

In this study, we aim to compare the effectiveness of US-guided TAPB and EOIB for postoperative analgesia management after laparoscopic cholecystectomy surgery.
Our primary aim is to compare patient recovery scores (QoR15 Turkish version), our secondary aim is to compare postoperative pain scores (24-hour NRS), postoperative rescue analgesic use (opioid/meperidine), and opioid-related side effects (allergic reaction, nausea, vomiting).