Articles: nerve-block.
-
Poorly controlled acute breast surgery postoperative pain is associated with delayed recovery, increased morbidity, impaired quality of life, and prolonged opioid use during and after hospitalization. Recently, ultrasound-guided pectoralis nerve (PECS) I block and serratus anterior plane (SAP) block, together or individually, have emerged as a potential method to relieve pain, decrease opioid requirements, and improve patient outcomes. ⋯ The PECS I/SAP block may potentially reduce pain in patients having breast surgery for cancer by providing analgesia to the lateral and anterior chest wall. While this analysis showed a reduction in intraoperative opioid consumption, no significant postoperative benefit in either pain scores, opioid consumption, or length of stay was observed. This may be in part due to the PECS I/SAP block not providing adequate analgesia to the medial portion of the breast.
-
Case Reports
Rectus sheath nerve block for analgesia & incarcerated hernia reduction in the emergency department.
Patients who present to the emergency department (ED) with incarcerated or strangulated ventral hernias are often in significant pain. Furthermore, even with procedural sedation, reduction itself also causes substantial pain. Hernias that cannot be reduced at the bedside with intravenous opioids or procedural sedation will require emergent surgery, which contributes to morbidity and mortality, especially in high-risk populations. ⋯ Ultrasound can visualize and diagnose an incarcerated hernia, and a bilateral rectus sheath block can be performed in the ED to anesthetize the peritoneal wall, paralyze abdominal musculature, and achieve nearly painless hernia reduction.
-
Retrospective review of prospectively collected data. ⋯ 3.
-
Case Reports
Treatment of shoulder pain with ultrasound-guided interfascial plane block: A case series.
Shoulder pain is a common presentation to the Emergency Department (ED). Despite an increasing volume of ED visits for shoulder pain, achieving adequate pain control can be challenging. Ultrasound-guided nerve blocks, such as the interscalene nerve block (ISB), are effective but can cause hemidiaphragmatic paresis and motor dysfunction. The interfascial plane block (IPB) is a simple and new regional anesthesia technique that spares the diaphragm, and most upper extremity motor function. ⋯ The ultrasound-guided IPB is a simple, safe, and effective alternative approach to treating shoulder pain in the ED, especially in patients who may not tolerate ISB.