Effective Thoracoabdominal Pain Management Using Dual Epidural Catheter Placement in Esophageal Reconstruction: A Case Report

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background and Clinical Significance: Effective postoperative pain management is crucial in patients undergoing extensive thoracoabdominal surgery, such as esophageal reconstruction, where both thoracic and abdominal incisions are involved. In such cases, a single epidural catheter may not provide sufficient analgesic coverage. Dual epidural analgesia (DEA) offers a potential solution, allowing segmental, targeted pain control while minimizing systemic opioid exposure. Case Presentation: A 64-year-old male underwent esophageal reconstruction using a combined thoracoabdominal approach. Two epidural catheters were placed at Th5/6 and Th11/12 levels. Intraoperatively, segmental bupivacaine boluses and multimodal non-opioid intravenous analgesia were administered. Postoperatively, continuous epidural bupivacaine infusion was maintained, supplemented with morphine boluses when the numeric rating scale (NRS) was ≥5. Mean NRS scores were 2 at rest and 5 on movement on postoperative day 1 (POD1); 1 and 4 on POD2; and 3 and 5 on POD3. Total epidural morphine consumption was 36 mg over 340 h, and the 24-h bupivacaine dose was 180 mg (2.77 mg/kg/24 h). No complications were observed. Conclusions: Dual epidural analgesia provided effective, opioid-sparing multimodal pain control in complex thoracoabdominal surgery. This case highlights DEA as a safe and feasible approach when single-catheter coverage is inadequate, supporting enhanced recovery and reduced opioid use after esophageal reconstruction.
Original languageEnglish
Article number223
Number of pages7
JournalReports
Volume8
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Oct 2025

Keywords*

  • dual epidural catheter analgesia
  • esophageal reconstruction
  • thoracoabdominal surgery
  • opioid-sparing multimodal analgesia
  • case report

Field of Science*

  • 3.2 Clinical medicine

Publication Type*

  • 1.3. Anonymously reviewed scientific article published in a journal with an international editorial board and is available in another indexed database

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