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Permanent Neurologic Symptoms after Prolonged Epidural Analgesia
Authors:James H Diaz  MD  PhD  ; Harry J Gould III  MD  PhD
Institution:Professor of Anesthesiology and Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine;; Associate Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience, Department of Neurology, the Pain Mastery Center of Louisiana, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans (LSUHSC-NO), Louisiana
Abstract:Objective: Although transient neurologic symptoms may occur after neuraxial anesthetics with lidocaine, permanent neurologic symptoms (PNS) are unusual after uncomplicated continuous epidural analgesia (CEA). This report demonstrates that PNS may follow CEA uncomplicated by paresthesias, dural puncture, spinal hemorrhage, or intravascular local anesthetic injection; and performed with bupivacaine alone administered at high dosages with vasoconstrictors over a prolonged time period. Case Report: An obstetrical patient developed fixed left L5‐S1 sensorimotor radiculopathy following L5‐S1 level CEA with bupivacaine alone administered at high doses (270 mg) with a vasoconstrictor (epinephrine, 225 mg) over a prolonged time period (62 hours). Conclusions: CEA should be administered at higher lumbar levels for labor analgesia rather than at lumbosacral levels that may require higher volumes and concentrations of local anesthetics with greater potential for local anesthetic neurotoxicity. Local anesthetics with vasoconstrictors should only be used as sentinel markers of unrecognized intravascular entry, rather than as primary local anesthetics during CEA to avoid any potential for ischemic neuropathy.
Keywords:epidural complications  bupivacaine  neuropathic pain  radiculopathy
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