Articles: nerve-block.
-
J Clin Monit Comput · Aug 2024
High frequency variability index in predicting postoperative pain in video/robotic-assisted thoracoscopic surgery under combined general anesthesia and peripheral nerve block: an observational study.
The high frequency variability index (HFVI)/analgesia nociception index (ANI) is purported to assess the balance between nociception and analgesia in patients under general anesthesia. This observational study investigated whether intraoperative HFVI/ANI correlates with postoperative pain in patients performed with nerve block under general anesthesia in video/robotic-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS/RATS). We investigated whether maximum postoperative pain at rest and postoperative morphine consumption are associated with HFVI/ANI just before extubation, mean HFVI/ANI during anesthesia, the difference in HFVI/ANI between before and 5 min after the start of surgery, and the difference in HFVI/ANI between before and 5 min after the nerve block. ⋯ Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis revealed that moderate (NRS > 3) or severe (NRS > 7) postoperative pain could not be predicted by HFVI/ANI just before extubation. In addition, there were no associations between postoperative morphine consumption and HFVI/ANI at any time points. The present study demonstrated that it is difficult to predict the degree of postoperative pain in patients undergoing VATS/RATS under general anesthesia combined with peripheral nerve block, by using HFVI/ANI obtained at multiple time points during general anesthesia.
-
One patient with systemic sclerosis with index fingertip necrosis and another with probable systemic sclerosis with index and middle fingertip impending necrosis were successfully treated with ultrasound-guided median nerve block application on the affected side. The nailfold temperatures of the affected fingers measured using thermography were below 25°C. ⋯ Peripheral nerve block can be a basic treatment for fingertip necrosis. The thermographical observation of the extent and region in which the temperature increased is novel.
-
Acute post-subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) headaches are common and severe. Management strategies for post-SAH headaches are limited, with heavy reliance on opioids, and pain control is overall poor. Pterygopalatine fossa (PPF) nerve blocks have shown promising results in treatment of acute headache, including our preliminary and published experience with PPF-blocks for refractory post-SAH headache during hospitalization. The BLOCK-SAH trial was designed to assess the efficacy and safety of bilateral PPF-blocks in awake patients with severe headaches from aneurysmal SAH who require opioids for pain control and are able to verbalize pain scores. ⋯ The trial has a primary efficacy end point (oral morphine equivalent/day use within 24 h after each PPF-injection), a primary safety end point (incidence of radiographic vasospasm at 48 h from first PPF-injection), and a primary tolerability end point (rate of acceptance of second PPF-injection following the first PPF-injection). BLOCK-SAH will inform the design of a phase III trial to establish the efficacy of PPF-block, accounting for different headache phenotypes.