Regional anesthesia and pain medicine
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2011
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyLidocaine pretreatment with tourniquet versus lidocaine-propofol admixture for attenuating propofol injection pain: a randomized controlled trial.
Findings from studies investigating optimal techniques for attenuating propofol-related injection pain are inconsistent. In previous studies, lidocaine pretreatment using a tourniquet has been reported to be superior, inferior, or equivalent to a lidocaine-propofol admixture for reducing pain. This discordance could represent either no meaningful difference in the treatments or underlying methodological differences in the previous studies. We hypothesized that tourniquet-controlled pretreatment with lidocaine would be superior to lidocaine-propofol admixture for reducing propofol injection pain. ⋯ Tourniquet-controlled pretreatment with lidocaine is statistically superior to admixing lidocaine with propofol for reducing propofol injection pain intensity, but the clinical importance of this small effect is questionable. However, pretreatment more effectively eliminates injection pain.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2011
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyA randomized comparison of infraclavicular and supraclavicular continuous peripheral nerve blocks for postoperative analgesia.
Although the efficacy of single-injection supraclavicular nerve blocks is well established, no controlled study of continuous supraclavicular blocks is available, and their relative risks and benefits remain unknown. In contrast, the analgesia provided by continuous infraclavicular nerve blocks has been validated in randomized controlled trials. We therefore compared supraclavicular with infraclavicular perineural local anesthetic infusion following distal upper-extremity surgery. ⋯ A local anesthetic infusion via an infraclavicular perineural catheter provides superior analgesia compared with a supraclavicular perineural catheter.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2011
Postvoid residuals remain unchanged in patients with postoperative thoracic epidural analgesia after thoracotomy.
We found in previous studies that thoracic epidural analgesia (TEA) after open renal surgery via lumbotomy significantly impaired bladder function with decreased detrusor contractility and increased postvoid residuals under urodynamic assessment. Here we evaluated the effect of TEA on bladder emptying in patients undergoing thoracotomy. ⋯ Most patients after thoracotomy had unchanged postvoid residuals under TEA. Our study design does not allow us to determine cause and effect or to make conclusions that are based on comparative, randomized data. However, our observations do yield a hypothesis-generating basis for future clinical trials.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2011
Computed tomography celiac trunk topography relating to celiac plexus block.
The celiac plexus is a dense autonomic network surrounding the celiac trunk. To block this plexus, the celiac trunk is a landmark for needle placement. Needles inserted at a distance from the midline, "walking off" the vertebra, may penetrate surrounding organs. We reviewed 200 computed tomography images to investigate the celiac trunk topography relating to the block. ⋯ The celiac trunk anatomy varies. Blocking needles walking off the vertebra from a fixed distance frequently traverse vital organs. Previewing celiac-aortic-vertebral topography with a simulating block on individual patient's computed tomography (CT) image for accordant needle placement subsequently is warranted.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2011
Mechanical hypersensitivity, sympathetic sprouting, and glial activation are attenuated by local injection of corticosteroid near the lumbar ganglion in a rat model of neuropathic pain.
Inflammatory responses in the lumbar dorsal root ganglion (DRG) play a key role in pathologic pain states. Systemic administration of a common anti-inflammatory corticosteroid, triamcinolone acetonide (TA), reduces sympathetic sprouting, mechanical pain behavior, spontaneous bursting activity, and cytokine and nerve growth factor production in the DRG. We hypothesized that systemic TA effects are primarily due to local effects on the DRG. ⋯ A single injection of corticosteroid in the vicinity of the axotomized DRG can mimic many effects of systemic TA, mitigating behavioral and cellular abnormalities induced by spinal nerve ligation. This provides a further rationale for the use of localized steroid injections clinically and provides further support for the idea that localized inflammation at the level of the DRG is an important component of the spinal nerve ligation model, commonly classified as neuropathic pain model.