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1.

Objective

To assess the analgesic efficiency of a continuous iliofascial nerve sheath block after total hip arthroplasty replacement (RPTH).

Study design

open and prospective pilot study.

Patients and methods

Before induction of general anaesthesia (GA), an iliofascial catheter was inserted (group KT, n = 11) or not (group NKT, n = 10). In the KT group, 30 ml of ropivacaïne 4,75 mg/ml (maximum dose) were injected, and 14 mg/h of ropivacaïne 2 mg/ml were infused during the first 48 postoperative hours. All patients underwent a standardized GA and a multimodal postoperative analgesia with a intravenous PCA morphine, paracetamol and tramadol during the first 48 hours. Postoperative pain assessment which was achieved using visual analogic scores (VAS) at rest (EVAr) and on movement (EVAm), total morphine consumption, and side effects were collected during the first 48 hours. Statistical analysis was performed using a Mann and Whitney test for the quantitative values and a chi 2 exact test for the qualitative values. Data are expressed as median [interquartile range].

Results

Total morphine consumption was lower in the KT group with a total amount of 26 mg [11–48] versus 77.5 mg [55–91] (p = 0.007) at h48. EVAr and EVAm were lower in the KT group at h4, h8, h24, h36 for the EVAr and during the 48 postoperative hours for EVAm. Three patients experienced nausea and/or vomiting in the KT group versus 6 in the NKT group (p = 0.05).

Conclusion

After RPTH surgery, continuous iliofascial block reduces morphine consumption; provide a better pain relief at rest and on movement than IV multimodal analgesia alone.  相似文献   

2.
Functionality of the nerve stimulator and integrity of the electrical circuit should be verified and confirmed before performing peripheral nerve blockade. The clinical cases reported here demonstrate that electrical disconnection or malfunction during nerve localization can unpredictably occur and a checklist is described to prevent the unknown electrical circuit failure.  相似文献   

3.
Elderly patients should benefit from maximum care in cases of serious trauma, starting with pre-hospital care. A proper evaluation of the gravity of the trauma is an essential element in the management. The elderly are at risk of “under-triage”, which can result in inappropriate hospital admission and delayed trauma care. Particular attention must be paid to “common” trauma, because such trauma is often associated with a potentially serious outcome in elderly patients. The Vittel criteria offer an important tool to estimate the level of gravity and to help in patient triage. The kinetic of the accident is important in identifying serious trauma. Emergency medical services with physicians on board must be the norm in cases of severe trauma, irrespective of the age of the patient. The literature clearly indicates the benefit of an aggressive strategy in elderly trauma patients, thus justifying direct admission in a trauma center in cases of real or potentially serious trauma. There is no difference in pre-hospital care management between elderly and younger trauma patients. Analgesia must be a priority. When a self-assessment of pain intensity is impossible, specific scales for pain can be used, such as Algoplus®. Morphine titration is the recommended strategy for analgesia in the pre-hospital setting and the same protocol must be used for both the elderly and younger patients. Locoregional anaesthesia should be used when possible in this setting, in particular the ilio-facial block. Age is not a criterion for a non-resuscitation order in trauma patients. The decisions of limitation of therapeutic, if they were not anticipated, will be discussed after admission, according to the principles of the current legislation.  相似文献   

4.
The sensory innervation of the face is provided by the three major nerves, emerging from trigeminal nerve: the ophthalmic, maxillary and mandibular nerve. Nerve blocks of the face or head are not widely used in practice in France. However, regional anaesthesia has shown its value in terms of quality of analgesia and perioperative opioid economy in children and adults. Facial peripheral nerve blocks are divided into two categories: superficial trigeminal nerve blocks and deeper blocks such as the mandibular or suprazygomatic maxillary block. The performance of these blocks is simple provided the usual safety rules are followed. As for other peripheral nerve blocks, ultrasound guidance has shown its interest for the realization of facial nerve blocks to identify anatomical structure and to locate the spread of the injected local anaesthetic.  相似文献   

5.
INTRODUCTION: Continuous administration of local anesthetic through a catheter placed in the scar of a laparotomy is a postoperative analgesic technique, which seems effective but remains little developed and poorly codified. METHODS: In this prospective evaluation, we present a series of 25 observations of adult patients scheduled for abdominal laparotomy, to which a multiperforate catheter was placed at the end of the intervention by the surgeon in pre-peritoneal position, allowing the continuous perfusion of ropivaca?ne over the first 48 postoperative hours. Patients received intravenous paracetamol associated with ketoprophene or nefopam. Opiates were given as rescue analgesics, in case of failure in pain relief, defined on objective criteria measured on visual analogic scale (VAS). RESULTS: The feasibility of the technique was excellent, except in one case of catheter obstruction. Pain was adequately relieved, with a majority of patients having VAS scores lower than 3/10 cm with the VAS, as well as rest as during mobilization. Only 9 patients needed morphine rescue analgesics. There was no sign of clinical overdose nor parietal complication related to the technique. Blood dosages of ropivacaine, carried out among 5 patients having received 600 mg daily, showed serum concentrations below the thresholds of toxicity. CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal a good effectiveness of the method, with moderate pain intensity and a low analgesic consumption. The local and general tolerance was excellent.  相似文献   

6.
7.

Introduction

Few information are available regarding the learning curve in ultrasonography and even less for ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia. This study aimed to evaluate in a training program the learning curve on a phantom of 12 residents novice in ultrasonography.

Material and methods

Twelve trainees inexperienced in ultrasonography were given introductory training consisting of didactic formation on the various components of the portable ultrasound machine (i.e. on/off button, gain, depth, resolution, and image storage). Then, students performed three trials, in two sets of increased difficulty, at executing these predefined tasks: adjustments of the machine, then localization of a small plastic piece introduced into roasting pork (3 cm below the surface). At the end of the evaluation, the residents were asked to insert a 22 G needle into an exact predetermined target (i.e. point of fascia intersection). The progression of the needle was continuously controlled by ultrasound visualization using injection of a small volume of water (needle perpendicular to the longitudinal plane of the ultrasound beam). Two groups of two different examiners evaluated for each three trials the skill of the residents (quality, time to perform the machine adjustments, to localize the plastic target, and to hydrolocalize, and volume used for hydrolocalization). After each trial, residents evaluated their performance using a difficulty scale (0: easy to 10: difficult).

Results

All residents performed the adjustments from the last trial of each set, with a learning curve observed in terms of duration. Localization of the plastic piece was achieved by all residents at the 6th trial, with a shorter duration of localization. Hydrolocalization was achieved after the 4th trial by all subjects. Difficulty scale was correlated to the number of trials. All these results were independent of the experience of residents in regional anesthesia.

Discussion

Four trials were necessary to adjust correctly the machine, to localize a target, and to complete hydrolocalization. Ultrasonography in regional anesthesia seems to be a fast-learning technique, using this kind of practical training.  相似文献   

8.

Introduction

Several peripheral nerve block techniques (PNB) are performed for hand surgery. Their tolerance by patients or their efficacy are poorly described. We evaluated them for blocks at the wrist and at the brachial canal.

Patients and methods

Cohort of outpatients undergoing open carpal tunnel release under PNB with arm tourniquet. Various anaesthetic protocols existed in our staff. The primary end points were a moderate to severe pain (greater than 3/10 on a numerical rating scale) felt during needle puncture, nerve stimulation, mepivacaine injection, at the surgical site (intraoperatively) or at the arm tourniquet, an intraoperative lidocaine supplementation, the occurrence of vasovagal events. For each primary end point, a logistic regression analyzed: the effects of gender, age, operated side, Emla® application, sedation before PNB (midazolam-sufentanil), wrist or brachial canal approach, musculocutaneous or radial block were using.

Results

Between January 2007 and June 2010, 551 consecutive patients were analyzed. Puncture pain, mepivacaine injection pain, pain tourniquet and vasovagal events were associated with wrist block (P = 0.003, relative risk = 1.86; P < 0.001, RR = 4.22; P < 0.001, RR = 4.52; P = 0.035, RR = 6.40). An intraoperative pain greater than 3/10 at the surgical site, or a supplementation by the surgeon were associated with the absence of musculocutaneous block (P = 0.013, RR = 2.44; P = 0.013, RR = 2.51).

Discussion

Wrist blocks are less tolerated than brachial canal blocks. The musculocutaneous nerve might often participate in the palm sensitive innervation. For open carpal tunnel release, median, ulnar and musculocutaneous nerves blocks at the brachial canal should be preferred.  相似文献   

9.

Objectives

Since the last national survey on evaluation of professional practice in France, many peripheral nerve blocks techniques were developed. The aim of this study was to assess the place of such techniques and their impact on the stay in recovery room after orthopaedic surgery.

Study design

Prospective, multicentric study.

Patients and methods

Consecutive patients receiving a regional anaesthetic technique for orthopaedic surgery over a 15-day period were included in this multicenter study (four private clinics, two non-university and three university hospitals). Characteristics of blocks, duration of stay and activity of nurses in post-anaesthetic care unit (PACU) were recorded for each patient.

Results

A total of 289 blocks performed in 283 patients were analyzed. A regional anaesthetic technique was performed alone or associated with a light sedation (58 and 8% respectively) or with a general anaesthesia (44%). A continuous peripheral nerve block (mainly for femoral and iliofascial blocks) was performed in 25% of patients, mostly in university hospital and private clinics (35 and 26% respectively), but only in 3% of cases in non-university hospital. Mean duration of PACU stay was 64 ± 67 minutes. This time was longer when regional anaesthesia was associated to or performed after general anaesthesia. Workload of nurses was a simple supervision in 47% of the cases (in 61% of patients receiving regional anaesthesia alone vs 21% in those with general anaesthesia, p < 0.05).

Conclusion

This survey confirms that peripheral nerve block became widely used in orthopaedic surgery. This decreases the medical workload in PACU, especially for distal upper limb surgery. Regional anaesthetic techniques must be well taught during formation cursus of residents.  相似文献   

10.
Central venous catheters are placed frequently at our institution. Residents are taught the technique of subclavian line placement starting in their first year of training. Frequently the teaching stops once the line is in the vein. We have developed a method of fixation for subclavian central venous catheters that provides a safe, secure, and convenient means of fixation to the chest wall. The central venous catheter can be inserted by that technique with which the physician is the most comfortable and familiar.  相似文献   

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