Regional anesthesia and pain medicine
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 2013
Analysis of Inadvertent Intradiscal and Intravascular Injection During Lumbar Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injections: A Prospective Study.
Inadvertent intradiscal injection during a lumbar transforaminal epidural steroid injection (TFESI) can be critical given the possibility of discitis and disc degeneration. Intravascular steroid injection can result in devastating neurologic complications. We sought to identify the incidence of intradiscal and intravascular injection during lumbar TFESI and determine whether an aspiration test and static fluoroscopic image can be used to predict intravascular needle placement. ⋯ Inadvertent intradiscal injection during TFESI is not rare. Physicians who perform interventional pain procedures should increase their awareness of related potential complications. The aspiration test and static image of fluoroscope often fail to detect the intravascular injection during the TFESI. Real-time fluoroscopy should be the gold standard for confirming intravascular injection.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 2013
Comparative StudyComparison of Anatomic Landmarks and Ultrasound Guidance for Intercostal Nerve Injections in Cadavers.
Intercostal nerve (ICN) injections are routinely performed under anatomic landmark or fluoroscopic guidance for acute and chronic pain indications. Ultrasound (US) is being used increasingly to perform ICN injections, but there is lack of evidence to support categorically the benefits of US over conventional techniques. We compared guidance with US versus anatomic landmarks for accuracy and safety of ICN injections in cadavers in a 2-phase study that included evaluation of deposition of injected dye by dissection and spread of contrast on fluoroscopy. ⋯ Ultrasound confers higher accuracy and allows use of lower volumes of injectate compared with anatomic landmarks as a guidance method for ICN injections in cadavers. Ultrasound may be a viable alternative to anatomic landmarks as a guidance method for ICN injections.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 2013
Case ReportsAberrant Intrathecal Pump Refill: Ultrasound-guided Aspiration of a Substantial Quantity of Subcutaneous Hydromorphone.
Intrathecal drug delivery systems are an effective and increasingly common pain treatment modality for certain patient populations. Pumps are surgically inserted in a subcutaneous abdominal pocket and refilled with highly concentrated medication at regular intervals. ⋯ We describe the injection of hydromorphone into the pump's surrounding subcutaneous pocket, subsequent opioid overdose, and the novel application of ultrasound to visualize and aspirate the subcutaneous drug. Ultrasonography can be used as an effective modality for rapid diagnosis and treatment of an accidental pocket fill.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 2013
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyUltrasound-guided Sciatic Nerve Block in Overweight and Obese Patients: A Randomized Comparison of Performance Time Between the Infragluteal and Subgluteal Space Techniques.
Despite ultrasound (US) guidance, sciatic nerve block (SNB) remains among the least performed peripheral blocks. By targeting the tissue plane between the gluteus maximus and quadratus femoris muscles, the US-guided subgluteal space technique may facilitate the performance of US-guided SNB. We aimed to evaluate whether the subgluteal space technique shortens SNB performance time in overweight and obese patients compared with the conventional infragluteal technique. ⋯ The subgluteal space technique may be performed 50% faster, with no detectable differences in block success and analgesic efficacy, compared with the infragluteal technique for US-guided SNB in overweight and obese patients receiving multimodal analgesia. Injection of local anesthetics along tissue planes may produce similar block characteristics to perineural injection for US-guided SNB.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 2013
Observational StudyAn Analysis of the Safety of Epidural and Spinal Neuraxial Anesthesia in More Than 100,000 Consecutive Major Lower Extremity Joint Replacements.
A feared complication of spinal or epidural anesthesia is the development of epidural or spinal hematoma with subsequent neural element compression. Most available data are derived from the obstetric literature. Little is known about the frequency of hematoma occurrence among patients undergoing orthopedic joint arthroplasty, who are usually elderly and experience significant comorbidities. We sought to study the incidence of clinically significant lesions after spinal and epidural anesthesia and further describe their nature. ⋯ The incidence of epidural/spinal complications found in this consecutive case series is relatively low but higher than previously reported in the nonobstetric population. Further research using large data sets could quantify the significance of some of the potentially contributing factors observed in this study.