Articles: nerve-block.
-
Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1996
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialIlioinguinal iliohypogastric nerve blocks--before or after cesarean delivery under spinal anesthesia?
Preoperative local anesthetic blockade of somatosensory pathways involved with skin incision and other noxious perioperative stimuli may "preempt" or attenuate the postoperative pain response. Since the Pfannenstiel incision lies within the L1 dermatome, bilateral ilioinguinal, iliohypogastric nerve blocks (IINBs) should provide analgesia after low transverse cesarean section. We designed this study to compare the analgesic effect of IINBs placed before or after cesarean delivery. ⋯ Patient satisfaction and morphine use did not differ among the groups. We conclude that there is no benefit to ilioinguinal nerve blocks, either before or after surgery, in patients who receive spinal anesthesia for elective cesarean delivery. Our finding of increased pain in the After group is perplexing and requires confirmation.
-
This retrospective study concerns 1,373 adult patients who underwent forefoot surgery during 1988-95 under regional anaesthesia by ankle nerve blocks (of posterior tibial nerve systematically and other nerves according to the surgical site). As a rule, plain bupivacaine 0.5% (maximum 40 mL) was used, completed if necessary by lidocaine 1% (a few mL). A nerve stimulator is currently used for posterior tibial blocks. ⋯ No general anaesthesia was needed (except after one case of convulsions, likely from accidental injection of a few mL of local anaesthetic and without any sequelae). Five patients complained of temporary paraesthesias, with indication of a posterior tibial neurolysis in one case and complete recovery. Thus ankle blocks appear increasingly to be a satisfactory alternative to general anaesthesia for most surgical procedures on the forefoot, provided that all usual safety conditions are respected and the patient's acceptance of the procedure is obtained.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Combined "3-in-1"/sciatic nerve block. Block effectiveness, serum level and side effects using 700 mg mepivacaine 1% without and with adrenaline and prilocaine 1%].
A high dose of local anaesthetic is necessary for the combined "3-in-1"/sciatic nerve block. Prilocaine is recommended for its low toxicity. However, in some patients prilocaine results in pronounced methaemoglobin formation due to toludine. Little has been known hitherto about the use of high-dose mepivacaine for the combined 3-1/sciatic nerve block. This study was undertaken to compare the use of 700 mg mepivacaine 1% and of 700 mg prilocaine 1%. ⋯ Both mepivacaine 1% and prilocaine 1% are appropriate local anaesthetics for the combined 3-in-1/sciatic nerve block at a dose of 700 mg. There was no difference in the blocking efficacy. No patient showed clinical signs or symptoms of a local anaesthetic toxicity. Following prilocaine we are sometimes faced with high methaemoglobinemia, which may necessitate prolonged monitoring.
-
Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Jan 1996
Review[Three-in-one block or femoral nerve block. What should be done and how?].
The "3 in 1" block and the femoral nerve block are widely used for lower limb surgery and postoperative analgesia. Whether these blocks are in fact a same regional block with two different names or represent definitively two different blocks remains controversial. A large number of anatomical as well as functional variations of the lumbar plexus have been described and complicate a rational analysis of the spread of local anaesthetics following these blocks. ⋯ However, once the "3 in 1" block is well performed, a complete anaesthesia covering the territories of the femoral nerve, the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, and the obturator nerve occurs. Specific indications of each technique are different: major knee surgery and postoperative analgesia for the "3-in-1" block and leg surgery for femoral nerve block. The best approach for knee arthroscopy remains open for discussion.
-
Recent published data suggest that despite apparently satisfactory recovery from nondepolarising block (train-of-four ratios in excess of 0.90), even very small doses of additional relaxant may re-establish significant paralysis. We sought to verify this observation and quantify its magnitude. Twelve adult patients were studied under nitrous oxide-propofol-opioid anaesthesia and neuromuscular block was monitored electromyographically. ⋯ The control ED50 of mivacurium (calculated from the initial dose of mivacurium) averaged 43 micrograms.kg-1. When the same dose of drug was given at 95% recovery of the train-of-four ratio, the ED50 was reduced to 19 micrograms.kg-1 (p < 0.0001). Hence, there remains a considerable reduction in the neuromuscular margin of safety even at a train-of-four ratio of 0.95.