Study Background and Rationale:
Despite its minimally invasive advantages, laparoscopic hysterectomy can cause significant postoperative pain due to trocar sites, visceral manipulation, and peritoneal irritation. This pain results in opioid consumption, associated side effects, and delayed recovery. Multimodal analgesia is the cornerstone of postoperative care. In this context, trocar site infiltration with intrathecal morphine (long-acting central analgesia) and intraperitoneal local anesthetic administration (peripheral techniques targeting somatic and visceral pain) are effective options. This study aims to compare the effects of these two different analgesic strategies on the quality of postoperative recovery through a patient-centered outcome measure, the QoR-15, and objective hematologic inflammatory markers.
Technical Details of Intervention Protocols:
General Anesthesia Standardization: All patients will receive standard general anesthesia. Induction will be achieved with propofol and fentanyl, rocuronium bromide will be used for neuromuscular blockade, and anesthesia will be maintained with sevoflurane.
Group ITM (Intrathecal Morphine) Intervention: Before induction of general anesthesia, patients will be in the sitting or lateral decubitus position and 200 µg (0.2 mg) of morphine will be injected into the subarachnoid space with a 25G (or 27G) pencil-point spinal needle at the L3-L4 intervertebral space. Hemodynamic and respiratory parameters will be closely monitored for 30 minutes after the injection.
Group LA (Local Anesthetic) Intervention: At the end of the surgical procedure, 5 mL of 0.25% bupivacaine will be infiltrated into each trocar incision. Additionally, 40 mL of 0.25% bupivacaine will be administered intraperitoneally, distributing to the subhepatic, diaphragmatic, and pelvic surfaces. The total bupivacaine dose will be calculated to avoid exceeding 2 mg/kg body weight to avoid the risk of toxicity.
Standard Perioperative Medication Regimen: All patients in both groups will receive the following medications intraoperatively as part of multimodal analgesia: 1 g Paracetamol, 800 mg Ibuprofen, 3 mg Granisetron, 40 mg Esomeprazole, and 8 mg Dexamethasone.
Methodological Details for Outcome Assessments:
QoR-15 Questionnaire: The validated and reliable Turkish version of the primary outcome measure, QoR-15, will be used. The questionnaire will be administered before surgery to obtain preoperative baseline values and at 24 hours postoperatively as the primary outcome.
Pain and Side Effect Monitoring: Postoperative pain will be assessed using a Visual Analog Scale (VAS: 0-10 cm) at rest and during coughing/activity. Assessments will be made at 2-hour intervals from the 2nd postoperative hour to the 24th hour. Nausea, vomiting, pruritus, and respiratory depression (SpO2 \< 90% or respiratory rate \< 8/minute) will be recorded using standard forms.
Hematological Inflammatory Markers: A complete blood count will be analyzed using an automated hematology analyzer from venous blood samples taken preoperatively (baseline, T0) and at the 24th postoperative hour (T13). Neutrophil/Lymphocyte Ratio (NLR), Platelet/Lymphocyte Ratio (PLR), Lymphocyte/Monocyte Ratio (LMR), and Systemic Immuno-Inflammation Index (SII = (Platelet count x Neutrophil count) / Lymphocyte count) will be calculated.
Blinding Protocol: Except for the anesthesiologist who performs the randomization and intervention, the patients, the surgical team, the investigators collecting postoperative data, and the statistical analyst will be blinded to group distinctions. Randomization will be stored using sequential, numbered, opaque envelopes.
Clinical Significance of the Study:
The findings of this study may provide evidence-based recommendations regarding the most effective multimodal analgesia regimen after laparoscopic hysterectomy. The demonstrated superiority of intrathecal morphine in reducing the systemic inflammatory response and patient-reported quality of recovery may result in less opioid use and faster recovery. Conversely, if local anesthetic techniques are adequate, the potential risks of central block may be avoided.