Articles: nerve-block.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1978
The clinical character of local anesthetics: a function of frequency-dependent conduction block.
It is clinically recognized fact that some local anesthetics have a proclivity for inhibition of motor nerves, while others preferentially affect sensory and sympathetic fibers. On the basis that sensory fibers have a frequency threshold for transmission of nociceptive stimuli and that somatic motor fibers have no such frequency threshold, we hypothesized that this variation may be due to differences in the effect of local anesthetics on axonal refractory period. Frog sciatic nerves were partially blocked with lidocaine, bupivacaine, tetracaine and etidocaine, and then stimulated in trains of 17 pulses, at frequencies between 3 and 100 Hz. ⋯ At a comparable level of partial block (50% at 100 Hz), tetracaine and etidocaine showed only a 10% difference between 3 and 100 Hz, while with bupivacaine and lidocaine there was a 30% drop between these two frequencies. This excellent correlation between the laboratory and clinical phenomenon supports our hypothesis. Local anesthetics which have a minimal effect on the refractory period yield enhanced motor block; whereas local anesthetics with a large effect on the refractory period are relatively more potent blockers of sensory and sympathetic transmission.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1978
A new nerve stimulator for monitoring neuromuscular blockade and performing nerve blocks.
A new stimulator is described with characteristics designed to take advantage of recent knowledge of the pharmacology of neuromuscular relaxants and events involved in normal neuromuscular transmission. The stimulator has proven as useful in performance of peripheral nerve blocks as in monitoring neuromuscular blockade.