Der Schmerz
-
From 1 August 1983 to 6 June 1992, 284 patients underwent decompression of the trigeminal root in the rear part of the skull as treatment for tic douloureux. According to preoperative diagnosis and intraoperative inspection, a space-occupying process was the cause of the typical neuralgia in 13 cases (4 meningiomas, 3 epidermoid tumours, 3 acoustic neuromas and 2 trigeminal neuromas). In 271 cases (95.4%) microsurgical vascular decompression according to Jannetta was carried out. ⋯ In summary, the long-term results confirm that microsurgical vascular decompression can be offered as the method of choice for treatment of trigeminal neuralgia in younger patients, and in older patients when cardiopulmonary risk factors and cerebrovascular processes can be eliminated. Alternative methods are high-frequency lesionsing of the gasserian ganglion according to Sweet and chemorhizolysis of the gasserian ganglion, but these must be restricted exclusively to the treatment of typical trigeminal neuralgia with tic douloureux. Persistent neuropathic pain caused by atraumatic or drug-induced lesion to the trigeminal nerve cannot be positively influenced either by surgical decompression or by destructive operations on the gasserian ganglion.
-
This is the first case report of a patient self-administering local anaesthetics to painful peripheral nerves in the face. Severe chronic pain of neuropathic origin was caused by a trauma of the face and head following a traffic accident 20 years ago. The patient himself chose the method of self-injection for pain control. He applies the local anaesthetic bupivacaine with an insulin syringe while looking in a mirror.
-
We report a case of severe respiratory depression during postoperative patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) in a 14-year-old boy. The medication cassette of a Pharmacia CADD-PCA 5200 was not properly connected, which led to a free-flow infusion of about 85 mg piritramide (strong mu-opioid agonist) within 15 min; the patient lost consciousness and developed apnea. He was successfully treated with artificial ventilation via ambu-bag and 0.2 mg naloxone i. v. The incident occurred approx. 2 h after the start of postoperative medication, when other infusions (suspended above the PCA device level) had been stopped, making the free-flow opioid infusion possible. As the PCA device was in a bedside pump enclosure, the disconnection was not immediately apparent. ⋯ Although PCA is considered a safe method, it can have potentially lethal complications: Technical problems or serious handling errors involve the risk of large volumes of analgesics being infused within a very short time. Therefore, we recommend apparative monitoring (e. g., pulse oximetry) as a necessary condition for the safe use of PCA.