Articles: nerve-block.
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A 69-year-old white female presented for corneal transplant, but her numerous medical problems placed her at unacceptably high risk for prolonged general anesthesia. Routine monitored anesthesia care measures would not have provided her or the surgeon the comfort and repose necessary for a successful outcome. We describe anesthetic management for ophthalmic surgery, using epidural anesthesia in conjunction with retrobulbar block, in an elderly patient at high risk for general anesthesia whose intractable back and leg pain would have otherwise precluded her cooperation in maintaining a motionless operative field.
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In 1986, Reiestad and Strömskag introduced interpleural postoperative analgesia with local anaesthetic solutions. The aim of this review was to describe the physiological mechanisms, indications and limits of this new mechanisms, indications and limits of this new technic. Interpleural analgesia has been successfully used for pain relief after cholecystectomy by subcostal incision. ⋯ After thoracotomy, if this technic seemed to be simple by visual placement of the catheter tips by the surgeon, most of the studies failed to demonstrate reduction of postoperative pain. Finally, interpleural analgesia has recently been shown to be effective in the management in various chronic pain syndromes of the upper abdomen (pancreatitis...) and thorax (postherpetic neuralgia, upper extremity reflex sympathetic dystrophy). The efficacy of this technic for long-term chronic pain involves the blockade of the sympathetic chain of the injected side.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Perioperative analgesia by 3-in-one block in total hip arthroplasty. Prospective randomized blind study.
In a prospective randomized blind study of 182 patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty, the patients per- and postoperative need for analgesics was assessed in two groups, one receiving general anesthesia and a 3-in-one block, the other group only general anesthesia. Although we found a significant reduction in analgesics per- and postoperatively in the 3-in-one block group, the difference in analgesics was small and has no clinical relevance in the patient with a healthy cardiovascular status. We conclude that 3-in-one block in combination with light general anesthesia is not the anesthetic of choice in total hip arthroplasty using the posterior approach.
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Plexus nerve blocks of the lower limb have been described for many years but were seldom used until recently. Postoperative analgesia is one of the main indications of these blocks. The blockade of both lumbar and sciatic plexuses is required for most of the surgical procedures performed on the proximal part of the lower limb. ⋯ Several pharmacokinetic studies have documented that toxic thresholds of plasma concentrations of local anaesthetics are not reached with the doses commonly injected. Many different techniques and landmarks have been described providing several alternatives to perform these blocks according to the type and the localisation of the surgical procedure. Extensive indications are reported for day case surgery or patients at risk.
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Regional anesthesia · Jan 1992
Venous levels of lidocaine and bupivacaine after midtarsal ankle block.
No data are available on blood levels of local anesthetics after ankle block. ⋯ The low peak level of local anesthesia and the prolonged analgesia confirmed the safety and efficacy of midtarsal ankle block for forefoot surgery and suggest that bupivacaine may be the local anesthetic agent of choice.