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Pain & Central Nervous System Week


New anesthesia study findings have been reported by X.S. Blanch and colleagues



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This article was published in Pain & Central Nervous System Week, which you can subscribe to online.

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2009 JUL 13 - (NewsRx.com) -- "Exact location of the needle tip during nerve stimulation-guided peripheral nerve blocks is unknown. Using high-frequency ultrasound imaging, we tested the hypothesis that intraneural injection is common with nerve stimulator-guided sciatic nerve (SN) block in popliteal fossa," scientists in Barcelona, Spain report.

"Forty-two patients scheduled for hallux valgus repair were studied. Sciatic block at the popliteal fossa was accomplished using nerve stimulation. When a motor response was elicited at < 0.5 mA (2 Hz, 0.1 ms), 40 ml of local anaesthetic (LA) was injected. Using ultrasound (Titan, Sonosite, 5-10 MHz), the diameters and area of the SN were measured before and after the injection. The presence of nerve swelling and proximal or distal diffusion of LA were also assessed. Intraneural injection was defined as nerve area (NA) increase of >= 15% and one or more additional ultrasonographic markers (nerve swelling, proximal-distal diffusion within epineural tissue). Clinical neurological evaluation was performed 1 week after the block. Post-injection NA increase >= 15% was seen in 32 (76%) patients [0.54 (s 0.19) cm(-2) vs 0.76 (0.24) cm(-2); P< 0.05]. Nerve swelling with fascicular separation was observed in 37 (88%) patients; proximal and distal diffusion of LA were present in six (14%) and 14 (38%) patients, respectively. Intraneural injection criteria were met in 28 (66%) patients. Greater NA increase was present in patients with fast block onset [61 (45) vs 25 (33)%; (Dif 35% 95% CI 61-9%); P< 0.05]. No patient developed neurological complications," wrote X.S. Blanch and colleagues.

The researchers concluded: "Intraneural (subepineural) injection is a common occurrence after nerve stimulator-guided SN block at the popliteal fossa, yet it may not inevitably lead to neurological complications.."

Blanch and colleagues published their study in British Journal of Anaesthesia (Intraneural injection during nerve stimulator-guided sciatic nerve block at the popliteal fossa. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2009;102(6):855-861).

For additional information, contact X.S. Blanch, University of Barcelona''Dept. of Anesthesiology, C Villarroel 170, E-08036 Barcelona, Spain.

The publisher's contact information for the British Journal of Anaesthesia is: Oxford University Press, Great Clarendon St., Oxford OX2 6DP, England.

Keywords: Spain, Barcelona, Life Sciences, Hallux Valgus, Pain Medicine, Anesthesia.

This article was prepared by Pain & Central Nervous System Week editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2009, Pain & Central Nervous System Week via NewsRx.com.

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