Go Back   Student Doctor Network Forums > Physician / Resident Forums [ MD / DO ] > Anesthesiology


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-13-2009, 11:38 AM   #1
Banned
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 47
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default Femoral nerve block right after spinal placement


SDN Members don't see this ad. (About Ads)
If you gave a peron a spinal anesthetic (standard Bupivacaine) and say about 30 minutes later attempted to place a femoral nerve block with ultrsound guidance and a nerve stimulator. would you see a positive muscle twitch from the nerve stimulation? I believe you would since you are directly stimulating the nerve verses stimulation that has to access the CNS. My fellow classmate believes you would not since the spinal anesthetic is blocking any electrical signal. Who is right?
pencan is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-13-2009, 11:53 AM   #2
Member
 
dhb's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,318
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Yes you would see a twitch but the patient will not be able to indicate pain upon injection.
dhb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-13-2009, 07:56 PM   #3
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 482
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dhb View Post
Yes you would see a twitch but the patient will not be able to indicate pain upon injection.
i'm gonna play dumb here for a minute, but if you block sodium channels and propagation (generalized), would there really be stimulation along a branch? what i think is funny is that when blocks are placed (via stim +/- US), we rarely if ever check deep stim well after 'SAB' has been placed. we go for sensory level. good thread/inquiry for sure.
dfk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-13-2009, 08:42 PM   #4
4K Member
 
Noyac's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 4,637
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dfk View Post
i'm gonna play dumb here for a minute, but if you block sodium channels and propagation (generalized), would there really be stimulation along a branch? what i think is funny is that when blocks are placed (via stim +/- US), we rarely if ever check deep stim well after 'SAB' has been placed. we go for sensory level. good thread/inquiry for sure.


I don't think you are playing.

Let me ask you, what Na channels are blocked after SAB? Where are they? Then think about where you are stimulating when doing a FNB.
Noyac is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 12:48 AM   #5
Member
 
dhb's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,318
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dfk View Post
if you block sodium channels and propagation (generalized)
Then you're probably dead.
dhb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 04:21 AM   #6
Laugh at me, will they?
 
pgg's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Embracing The Suck
Posts: 6,037
SDN Moderator Navy SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dfk View Post
i'm gonna play dumb here for a minute, but if you block sodium channels and propagation (generalized), would there really be stimulation along a branch? what i think is funny is that when blocks are placed (via stim +/- US), we rarely if ever check deep stim well after 'SAB' has been placed. we go for sensory level. good thread/inquiry for sure.
What?

Are you routinely doing PNBs after spinals?

What is "check deep stim" and why would you do it after a spinal?

And what do you mean by "block sodium channels and propagation (generalized)"? You realize that the local anesthetic administered for a spinal goes in the spine, right?
pgg is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 06:13 AM   #7
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

No indication for femoral block "right" after spinal. Either place the block prior to SAB or after sensory function has returned to the leg.

However, it can be done this way and I have seen it. If there is a complication (even using U/S guidance) that technique is open for criticism.

By the way the nerve stimulator will work properly with GA, Epidural or Spinal.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 06:18 AM   #8
Banned
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 55

Default

If you are looking for additional block post op for pain either do before spinal, wait till spinal is gone or do a Fascia Iliaca Block which can be done safely without a Nerve stim or US...
ChrisA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 07:19 AM   #9
Laugh at me, will they?
 
pgg's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Embracing The Suck
Posts: 6,037
SDN Moderator Navy SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ChrisA View Post
If you are looking for additional block post op for pain either do before spinal, wait till spinal is gone or do a Fascia Iliaca Block which can be done safely without a Nerve stim or US...
I've seen people do fascia iliaca blocks in asleep kids using a nerve stim. They use landmarks for placing the needle, and the stim to ensure there is NOT a twitch before injecting. The idea being that if you get a twitch, you can move the needle before injecting.
pgg is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 09:09 AM   #10
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

It is more common practice (standard of care even?) to do nerve blocks under GA on children. While in the adult population an awake patient is preferential for "feedback" the pediatric population is different and as such, the published data strongly suggests a high safety profile on "anesthetized" children.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 10:48 AM   #11
Cardiac Anesthesiologist
 
periopdoc's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Kalispell, Montana
Posts: 1,865
SDN Life Member SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Blade and ChrisA


Can you give me any data to support your contention that PNB is safer in a awake or sedated patient with normal sensation than in a patient who is under GA or spinal?

At one of my institutions we do 99.9% of our adult blocks under GA. Been doing it this way for years. More total blocks than any single practicioner is likely to do in a career. No nerve injury yet.

The only data that exists (so far) is in pediatric patients and supports the safety of PNBs in anesthetised patients. (stay tuned)

-pod
__________________
.

I still think private practice anesthesia is the bomb.

Gun control legislation is like trying to reduce drunk driving by restricting sober people from owning and operating cars.
periopdoc is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 10:56 AM   #12
Banned
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 55

Default

Hey Peri

Excellent point. I agree, the literature currently suggests that you can do a PNB under GA with just about every patient. I think that doing it on the awake patient just adds an extra layer of protection where the patient can be used to comment on sensations and pain etc. I think this most recent article I read (see below), while about peds, absolutely can be applied to adults.


Having said that, I was mentioning doing the FNB either before or after spinal which would be a MAC case then. But the point you are making is well taken.

PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIOLOGY

The Relationship Between Current Intensity for Nerve Stimulation and Success of Peripheral Nerve Blocks Performed in Pediatric Patients Under General Anesthesia

Harshad Gurnaney, MBBS, Arjunan Ganesh, MBBS, and Giovanni Cucchiaro, MD From the Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Address e-mail to gurnaney@email.chop.edu.


Quote:
Originally Posted by periopdoc View Post
Blade and ChrisA


Can you give me any data to support your contention that PNB is safer in a awake or sedated patient with normal sensation than in a patient who is under GA or spinal?

At one of my institutions we do 99.9% of our adult blocks under GA. Been doing it this way for years. More total blocks than any single practicioner is likely to do in a career. No nerve injury yet.

The only data that exists (so far) is in pediatric patients and supports the safety of PNBs in anesthetised patients. (stay tuned)

-pod
ChrisA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 02:14 PM   #13
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 310
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by periopdoc View Post
Blade and ChrisA


Can you give me any data to support your contention that PNB is safer in a awake or sedated patient with normal sensation than in a patient who is under GA or spinal?

At one of my institutions we do 99.9% of our adult blocks under GA. Been doing it this way for years. More total blocks than any single practicioner is likely to do in a career. No nerve injury yet.

The only data that exists (so far) is in pediatric patients and supports the safety of PNBs in anesthetised patients. (stay tuned)

-pod
Some would suggest that certain PNB under GA are unsafe... There will never be a randomized controlled trial though to produce data.. but for certain there are case reports that suggest ISB under GA is unsafe.

http://journals.lww.com/anesthesiolo...&type=fulltext

as for standard of care in the adult population- I am going to have to say that doing PNBs under GA is not standard of care in adults. And, I bet one would be hard pressed to find someone who would argue to a jury that it is acceptable. Your institution may need to adjust its training procedures- because most people out in the real world are not putting their blocks in under GA.

drccw
drccw is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 03:56 PM   #14
Member
 
dhb's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,318
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by drccw View Post
Your institution may need to adjust its training procedures- because most people out in the real world are not putting their blocks in under GA.

drccw
Is this true?
I don't see performing PNB with US guidance for patients under GA as something totally reckless. Current evidence points more to injection pressure as a cause of injury rather than intra or extraneural injection.
dhb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 04:55 PM   #15
Cardiac Anesthesiologist
 
periopdoc's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Kalispell, Montana
Posts: 1,865
SDN Life Member SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by drccw View Post
Some would suggest that certain PNB under GA are unsafe...
Some would suggest, but I am interested in data. We have data demonstrating the safety in pediatric patients. I am asking if in fact adults are really just big kids.


Quote:
Originally Posted by drccw View Post
There will never be a randomized controlled trial though to produce data..
I would not be so certain. As I alluded to in my first post there is at least one institution that has enough retrospective safety data on blocks done under GA to allow for a RCT... stay tuned...


Quote:
Originally Posted by drccw View Post
but for certain there are case reports that suggest ISB under GA is unsafe. http://journals.lww.com/anesthesiolo...&type=fulltext
May I recommend this article, or this article, or this article, or... All describing complications of interscalene block in awake/ sedated patients. The only thing that all of these blocks have in common is that none were done with U/S. Am I saying that they can only be done safely with U/S? Absolutely not. I am just saying that there are other factors that are much more likely to have caused the problem than if the patient was under GA or not. Given that there are no pain receptors in the spinal cord itself, I am not certain whether it would have made a difference in these cases if the patients were not under GA. It probably had more to do with bad luck or the skill of the operator or both.



Quote:
as for standard of care in the adult population- I am going to have to say that doing PNBs under GA is not standard of care in adults. And, I bet one would be hard pressed to find someone who would argue to a jury that it is acceptable.
I never said it was standard of care (whatever that term really means). There is no resident here that is not aware that this falls well outside the mainstream of what is happening at other non-pediatric institutions. I can think of two individuals, who have previously served as expert witnesses, who, given our safety record, would be willing to argue to a jury that it is in fact acceptable even if it is not the norm.



Quote:
Originally Posted by drccw View Post
Your institution may need to adjust its training procedures- because most people out in the real world are not putting their blocks in under GA.
So when academic institutions perpetuate "academic myth" they need to get with the times, but when they try to advance the field by examining new techniques they have to be brought back in line? Man there really is no winning for those academic folks is there.



- pod
periopdoc is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 05:14 PM   #16
Breaking Good
 
Hawaiian Bruin's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 1,321
SDN 10+ Year Member
Default

It is my opinion (and nothing more) that this is another useful arena for ultrasound guidance, which objectively confirms extraneural injection.
Hawaiian Bruin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 05:33 PM   #17
1K Member
 
2win's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,109
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hawaiian Bruin View Post
It is my opinion (and nothing more) that this is another useful arena for ultrasound guidance, which objectively confirms extraneural injection.
Yep - I am doing US guided fem. catheters under SAB. There is no need of nerve stim and this is the easiest procedure ever. Take a look at this website
www.neuraxiom.com. I think it is excellent and helpful.
2win is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 05:42 PM   #18
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hawaiian Bruin View Post
It is my opinion (and nothing more) that this is another useful arena for ultrasound guidance, which objectively confirms extraneural injection.
Alright. How about a real world case? A colleague of mine was doing an U/S guided block. After the first 3 ml's of local the patient screamed like he had been shot. This patient was heavily sedated but not under GA. It turns out that the provider had lost track of the tip of the needle and was at least perineural. Needless to say the needle was readjusted a few MM and the block completed without any post op complications.

While you superstuds think that U/S is perfect it isn't-yet. The pictures can be grainy and the needle difficult to visualize 100% of the time. Is U/S safe? Yes. But, does it GUARANTEE 100% no complications ever? No. Of Course, the equipment is only as good as the operator.

Blade
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 05:58 PM   #19
Support the ASA !
 
SleepIsGood's Avatar
 
Status: Fellow
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,969
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
Alright. How about a real world case? A colleague of mine was doing an U/S guided block. After the first 3 ml's of local the patient screamed like he had been shot. This patient was heavily sedated but not under GA. It turns out that the provider had lost track of the tip of the needle and was at least perineural. Needless to say the needle was readjusted a few MM and the block completed without any post op complications.

While you superstuds think that U/S is perfect it isn't-yet. The pictures can be grainy and the needle difficult to visualize 100% of the time. Is U/S safe? Yes. But, does it GUARANTEE 100% no complications ever? No. Of Course, the equipment is only as good as the operator.

Blade
Blade is 100% correct on this.

Alain Borgeat, huge regionalist in Switzerland is against ultrasound use and the inability to not clearly see the needle tip is one of his contentions. There was a famous pic (that I can not seem to locate now) that showed how on one view the needle tip appears to be extraneural, however, when rotating, or tilting the ultrasound transducer, the needle was INTRAneural.

For this reason, I think it's advisable to have some sort of feedback from the patient. This way he/she can communicate to you if the needles where it shouldnt be.
__________________
Hay que desayunar como rey, almorzar como principe y cenar como mendigo
SleepIsGood is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 06:39 PM   #20
Breaking Good
 
Hawaiian Bruin's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 1,321
SDN 10+ Year Member
Default

I never said u/s is perfect. I said useful.

As technology improves- better ultrasound images, echogenic needle tips, you shouldn't be losing the tip, especially if you're in plane for the whole insertion, and you watch your local as you inject. If you're injecting and you can't see local where you think your needle tip is, well, all I have to say is it would have been interesting to see what exactly his image was as he injected that 3 ccs.

I'm not saying u/s is a magic bullet and that we should all be adopting this right now, but I can easily foresee PNBs becoming ubiquitous in adults under GA with ultrasound guidance in the future.

Finally, nobody denies that success will be highly dependent on the skill of the operator. All this means is we need to have skilled operators.
Hawaiian Bruin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 06:53 PM   #21
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hawaiian Bruin View Post
I never said u/s is perfect. I said useful.

As technology improves- better ultrasound images, echogenic needle tips, you shouldn't be losing the tip, especially if you're in plane for the whole insertion, and you watch your local as you inject. If you're injecting and you can't see local where you think your needle tip is, well, all I have to say is it would have been interesting to see what exactly his image was as he injected that 3 ccs.

I'm not saying u/s is a magic bullet and that we should all be adopting this right now, but I can easily foresee PNBs becoming ubiquitous in adults under GA with ultrasound guidance in the future.

Finally, nobody denies that success will be highly dependent on the skill of the operator. All this means is we need to have skilled operators.

Sure I agree. But, in today's world with today's U/S the patient can provide value feedback that MAY prevent a serious complication. Today's needles are 100% echogenic and the tip may be lost at times. Why not err on the side of safety in adults? At least for now anyway. I know that case I presented was anectodal but his scream prevented serious injury.

Remember that case the next time you don't see the tip well and wait for the donut sign. Also, remember that current equipment is LIMITED so perhaps awake is best for 2009.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 06:57 PM   #22
1K Member
 
2win's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,109
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
Sure I agree. But, in today's world with today's U/S the patient can provide value feedback that MAY prevent a serious complication. Today's needles are 100% echogenic and the tip may be lost at times. Why not err on the side of safety in adults? At least for now anyway. I know that case I presented was anectodal but his scream prevented serious injury.

Remember that case the next time you don't see the tip well and wait for the donut sign. Also, remember that current equipment is LIMITED so perhaps awake is best for 2009.
Blade - u know, patient response means almost nothing....You can penetrate the nerve and there is no response. Guided injections are the future (if not the present...) for regional. Use or not the nerve stim is up to us... Regarsing the financial part - it is not worth to do the US based technique at this moment, better nerve stim.
2win is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-14-2009, 07:17 PM   #23
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 2win View Post
Blade - u know, patient response means almost nothing....You can penetrate the nerve and there is no response. Guided injections are the future (if not the present...) for regional. Use or not the nerve stim is up to us... Regarsing the financial part - it is not worth to do the US based technique at this moment, better nerve stim.
Patient's response in not always reliable. But, my anecdotal report of the patient SCREAMING was real. Current COMMUNITY standard of care is NOT to do blocks in adults under GA. As always, the standard of care is difficult to define and nobody really knows what exactly it means. At DA U you can do pretty much anything you want because YOU MAKE THE STANDARD. I have no doubt that in the near future U/S will allow us to block patients safely under GA or SAB.

Blade
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-15-2009, 12:58 AM   #24
Member
 
dhb's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,318
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
Patient's response in not always reliable. But, my anecdotal report of the patient SCREAMING was real.
The question is: does the screaming relate to nerve injury. A lot of articles describe intraneural LA injection with no morbidity...
dhb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-15-2009, 05:54 AM   #25
SDN Life Member
 
Planktonmd's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Florida
Posts: 4,600
SDN Emeritus Moderator SDN Life Member SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
No indication for femoral block "right" after spinal. Either place the block prior to SAB or after sensory function has returned to the leg.

However, it can be done this way and I have seen it. If there is a complication (even using U/S guidance) that technique is open for criticism.

By the way the nerve stimulator will work properly with GA, Epidural or Spinal.
I do almost ALL my femoral blocks post op with the spinal anesthetic still working.
You will not penetrate the femoral nerve unless you use a sharp needle or you use unnecessary force.
Planktonmd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-15-2009, 08:37 AM   #26
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dhb View Post
The question is: does the screaming relate to nerve injury. A lot of articles describe intraneural LA injection with no morbidity...

He stopped screaming when the needle was repositioned a few Millimeters and the injected resumed.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 11:07 AM   #27
New Member
 
Gasmachine's Avatar
 
Status Attending
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 3

Default

Though this thread is old and I am also old I suppose, I wish to express my input doing concurrent spinal and femoral nerve block. In this legitious age of law suits, I practice very conservative and in my mind safe anesthesia. We constantly strive to look for what is the standard of care to minimize our exposed risks giving our patients the best care.

I can only express my opinion that we are arbitrarily given direct responsibility for any anesthesia complications within the first 24 hours of their care. Where did the 24 hours come from? I have no idea maybe back in the day of ether someone says if it's remotely related to anesthesia causing bad outcomes you get pulled into QA. Not to say we can't still be blame for past 24 hours, I'm just saying 24 hours sticks out in my mind.

So back to the topic at hand. My opinion is that I do not place any femoral nerve blocks into patients if they have a spinal anesthesia. The remote chance of spinal hematoma and spinal cord nerve injury is extremely rare (maybe in 1 in 100's of thousand patient); however, why risk it by compounding it if you place a femoral nerve block and their is nerve injury? As far as I know femoral nerve blocks, U/S or nerve stim is not the standard of care for post-op pain management. Has it been mandated that we need to place femoral nerve blocks when indicated?

I would wait 24hrs after any spinal to place a femoral nerve block. Conservative? Yes. Standard of care? No. My version of safe anesthesia? Yes. Avoiding a QA session on a patient with permanent nerve injury? Possibly. Any literature to support my position? As with many things we do in medicine, the answer is No.
Gasmachine is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 03:13 PM   #28
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gasmachine View Post
Though this thread is old and I am also old I suppose, I wish to express my input doing concurrent spinal and femoral nerve block. In this legitious age of law suits, I practice very conservative and in my mind safe anesthesia. We constantly strive to look for what is the standard of care to minimize our exposed risks giving our patients the best care.

I can only express my opinion that we are arbitrarily given direct responsibility for any anesthesia complications within the first 24 hours of their care. Where did the 24 hours come from? I have no idea maybe back in the day of ether someone says if it's remotely related to anesthesia causing bad outcomes you get pulled into QA. Not to say we can't still be blame for past 24 hours, I'm just saying 24 hours sticks out in my mind.

So back to the topic at hand. My opinion is that I do not place any femoral nerve blocks into patients if they have a spinal anesthesia. The remote chance of spinal hematoma and spinal cord nerve injury is extremely rare (maybe in 1 in 100's of thousand patient); however, why risk it by compounding it if you place a femoral nerve block and their is nerve injury? As far as I know femoral nerve blocks, U/S or nerve stim is not the standard of care for post-op pain management. Has it been mandated that we need to place femoral nerve blocks when indicated?

I would wait 24hrs after any spinal to place a femoral nerve block. Conservative? Yes. Standard of care? No. My version of safe anesthesia? Yes. Avoiding a QA session on a patient with permanent nerve injury? Possibly. Any literature to support my position? As with many things we do in medicine, the answer is No.
Ridiculous. My Group has placed about 14,000 Femoral nerve blocks in PACU after the spinlas have worn off. Our postop complications are minimal (only one patient complained of pain/neuritis for 6 months). The idea that any Physician thinks you need to wait 24 hours after a spinal (after the Lovenox may have been started) is preposterous and without any evidence.
__________________
"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
Thomas Jefferson

BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 04:49 PM   #29
Newly Minted
 
Idiopathic's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Here
Posts: 8,142
SDN 10+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gasmachine View Post
Though this thread is old and I am also old I suppose, I wish to express my input doing concurrent spinal and femoral nerve block. In this legitious age of law suits, I practice very conservative and in my mind safe anesthesia. We constantly strive to look for what is the standard of care to minimize our exposed risks giving our patients the best care.

I can only express my opinion that we are arbitrarily given direct responsibility for any anesthesia complications within the first 24 hours of their care. Where did the 24 hours come from? I have no idea maybe back in the day of ether someone says if it's remotely related to anesthesia causing bad outcomes you get pulled into QA. Not to say we can't still be blame for past 24 hours, I'm just saying 24 hours sticks out in my mind.

So back to the topic at hand. My opinion is that I do not place any femoral nerve blocks into patients if they have a spinal anesthesia. The remote chance of spinal hematoma and spinal cord nerve injury is extremely rare (maybe in 1 in 100's of thousand patient); however, why risk it by compounding it if you place a femoral nerve block and their is nerve injury? As far as I know femoral nerve blocks, U/S or nerve stim is not the standard of care for post-op pain management. Has it been mandated that we need to place femoral nerve blocks when indicated?

I would wait 24hrs after any spinal to place a femoral nerve block. Conservative? Yes. Standard of care? No. My version of safe anesthesia? Yes. Avoiding a QA session on a patient with permanent nerve injury? Possibly. Any literature to support my position? As with many things we do in medicine, the answer is No.
what is this
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Cox
Maybe it's because you're relentlessly annoying. Or maybe it's becuase I'm intolerant of relentlessly annoying people. Whatever
Idiopathic is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 04:55 PM   #30
Anesthesiologist
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Midwest
Posts: 822
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by periopdoc View Post
Blade and ChrisA


Can you give me any data to support your contention that PNB is safer in a awake or sedated patient with normal sensation than in a patient who is under GA or spinal?

At one of my institutions we do 99.9% of our adult blocks under GA. Been doing it this way for years. More total blocks than any single practicioner is likely to do in a career. No nerve injury yet.

The only data that exists (so far) is in pediatric patients and supports the safety of PNBs in anesthetised patients. (stay tuned)

-pod
The Europeans I speak with at regional meetings do tons of blocks on sleeping adult patients also. I personally have no objection to doing it myself. In the "old days" sedating a patient for a block meant essentially GA for many docs I knew anyway.
imfrankie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 05:02 PM   #31
Anesthesiologist
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Midwest
Posts: 822
SDN 2+ Year Member
Default

I personally keep the injection pressure low with every block. Lots are intraneural according to my reading of the literature.
imfrankie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 05:56 PM   #32
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 2win View Post
Yep - I am doing US guided fem. catheters under SAB. There is no need of nerve stim and this is the easiest procedure ever. Take a look at this website
www.neuraxiom.com. I think it is excellent and helpful.
This procedure was easy before U/S came on the scene and is even easier now that we have U/S.

I would love to place my blocks under GA or SAB. It makes it easier on everyone. But, I do not think that is the current standard practice in most academic or private practices.
I will remain conservative for now because it seems the most prudent thing to do in a difficult medico-legal climate where anesthesia is blamed for all post op nerve injuries.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:01 PM   #33
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

by Capdevila et al. in 2005.29 The authors prospectively reviewed 1,416 continuous peripheral nerve catheters and reported an incidence of hypoesthesia or numbness in 3% and 2.2% of patients, respectively, and paresthesias in 1.5% of patients. Three neural lesions were noted after continuous femoral nerve blockade, two of which were performed on anesthetized patients, with subsequent resolution ranging from 36 h to 10 weeks. It should be noted that data were collected only up to 5 days after surgery, except in those patients in whom a prolonged neurologic deficit already was documented. Although most cases of nerve injury likely would present during this time period, some cases of neuropathy become apparent only several days or weeks after surgery.30
Welch et al. recently reported the results of a 10-yr retrospective review of more than 380,000 consecutive patients undergoing all types of procedures and anesthetics.7 They reported an overall incidence of PNI of 0.03%, with an incidence of 0.05% in orthopedic procedures. In addition, they found that the use of general anesthesia or epidural anesthesia increased the risk of postoperative neuropathy, but there was no difference with the use of peripheral nerve blockade. It should be noted that the authors excluded nerve injuries resulting from the surgical procedure, a factor that may falsely decrease their estimated incidence. Similar to the findings of the study by Capdevila et al.,29 the authors sought information on peripheral neuropathies that were identified only during the first 48 h after surgery. Previous studies have shown that many cases of perioperative neuropathy are first identified more than 48 h after THA surgery.11,14,25,26

http://journals.lww.com/anesthesiolo...al_Hip.11.aspx
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:17 PM   #34
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Blocks in anesthetized patients
Blocks in anesthetized patients should be avoided or at least an uncommon practice. When it is necessary to place blocks in anesthetized patients, this should be done only by practitioners with substantial experience with the planned technique. Such cases should NEVER be considered "teaching".

www.nysora.com
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:20 PM   #35
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

For adults, single-shot nerve blocks are a one time injection of local anesthesia given typically under sedation but before general anesthesia is started. A single-shot nerve block may also be given to children to help with pain control after surgery but in most cases, your anesthesiologist will perform the block while your child is already asleep (after general anesthesia has started). Single-shot nerve blocks are often used for pain control after orthopedic (bone and joint) surgery.

ASRA
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:27 PM   #36
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by imfrankie View Post
The Europeans I speak with at regional meetings do tons of blocks on sleeping adult patients also. I personally have no objection to doing it myself. In the "old days" sedating a patient for a block meant essentially GA for many docs I knew anyway.

The Europeans don't have to deal with our legal system in the USA. Good look with your defense of routine nerve blocks under GA if/when a patient gets a complication, even a complication most likely due to the surgery/surgeon or touniquet.

The legal system is why we stress "in-plane" instead of faster, easier, less painful out of plane blocks. Since there isn't any difference in outcome/complications in NS only vs U/S only guided blocks in experienced hands why do we need to go in-plane for every block. Where is the evidence?

Many European Anesthesiologists do out of plane U/S guided blocks and report excellent success with no increase risk of complications.

Have you ever tried an out of plane ISB, Femoral or Popliteal block? If you think in plane is easy then try out of plane and see how fast/quick a block can be with minimal tissue trauma.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skWTfAmAGcs
ISB Out of plane

Last edited by BLADEMDA; 05-29-2012 at 06:38 PM.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:38 PM   #37
Turboprop Driver
 
jetproppilot's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: level at FL210
Posts: 5,757
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
Alright. How about a real world case? A colleague of mine was doing an U/S guided block. After the first 3 ml's of local the patient screamed like he had been shot. This patient was heavily sedated but not under GA. It turns out that the provider had lost track of the tip of the needle and was at least perineural. Needless to say the needle was readjusted a few MM and the block completed without any post op complications.

While you superstuds think that U/S is perfect it isn't-yet. The pictures can be grainy and the needle difficult to visualize 100% of the time. Is U/S safe? Yes. But, does it GUARANTEE 100% no complications ever? No. Of Course, the equipment is only as good as the operator.

Blade
I've been doing ultrasound guided nerve blocks for a year now. A ton of interscalenes, popliteals, femorals...

BLADE IS SPOT ON.

I'm totally convinced it is LEVELS AND LEVELS AND LEVELS ABOVE

blind NS technique.

My blocks are much better.

After you emerge out of the learning curve the blocks are

EASY.

But ultrasound still isn't perfect.

I'm pretty deft with the ultrasound probe now and yet still sometimes I can't see my needle's exact point.....I have to extrapolate where it is from the tissue movement visible on the ultrasound picture.

Completely agree this is very operator dependent, but I feel sometimes I'm limited from seeing what I need to see by the technology.
__________________
Jet MD, LMFAO
jetproppilot is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:39 PM   #38
Senior Member
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,237
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
The Europeans don't have to deal with our legal system in the USA. Good look with your defense of routine nerve blocks under GA if/when a patient gets a complication, even a complication most likely due to the surgery/surgeon or touniquet.

The legal system is why we stress "in-plane" instead of faster, easier, less painful out of plane blocks. Since there isn't any difference in outcome/complications in NS only vs U/S only guided blocks in experienced hands why do we need to go in-plane for every block. Where is the evidence?

Many European Anesthesiologists do out of plane U/S guided blocks and report excellent success with no increase risk of complications.

Have you ever tried an out of plane ISB, Femoral or Popliteal block? If you think in plane is easy then try out of plane and see how fast/quick a block can be with minimal tissue trauma.

I'm gonna go out on a limb and suggest one reason for low complication rates in Europeans is that their patients have a far lower baseline risk of nerve injury. In my limited travels in Europe, my observation is they have far less obese patients (particularly the morbid and super morbid) compared to what I'm used to dealing with. I'm guessing they also have far lower rates of diabetes.

If you subscribe to the multiple (2 for most people) hit theory of nerve injury, the Europeans have it easier. Their same technique in all likelihood could result in much higher nerve injury rates on a different population.



I stick to doing blocks on adults not under GA if at all possible. There is no benefit to me to do it under GA. Doesn't save time. Adds a little risk, even if only in the medico-legal sense.

Nerve injuries happen. Any institution doing enough of them will see plenty if they look for them hard enough. If they aren't looking, of course they won't find them.
Mman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-29-2012, 06:47 PM   #39
Turboprop Driver
 
jetproppilot's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: level at FL210
Posts: 5,757
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
The Europeans don't have to deal with our legal system in the USA. Good look with your defense of routine nerve blocks under GA if/when a patient gets a complication, even a complication most likely due to the surgery/surgeon or touniquet.

The legal system is why we stress "in-plane" instead of faster, easier, less painful out of plane blocks. Since there isn't any difference in outcome/complications in NS only vs U/S only guided blocks in experienced hands why do we need to go in-plane for every block. Where is the evidence?

Many European Anesthesiologists do out of plane U/S guided blocks and report excellent success with no increase risk of complications.

Have you ever tried an out of plane ISB, Femoral or Popliteal block? If you think in plane is easy then try out of plane and see how fast/quick a block can be with minimal tissue trauma.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skWTfAmAGcs
ISB Out of plane
Watched the video.

Looks about the same as an in plane approach...don't think it is better in terms of time or trauma but definitely another approach to learn and get good at!
Thanks for posting... I'm gonna try it.
jetproppilot is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 02:59 AM   #40
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mman View Post
I'm gonna go out on a limb and suggest one reason for low complication rates in Europeans is that their patients have a far lower baseline risk of nerve injury. In my limited travels in Europe, my observation is they have far less obese patients (particularly the morbid and super morbid) compared to what I'm used to dealing with. I'm guessing they also have far lower rates of diabetes.

If you subscribe to the multiple (2 for most people) hit theory of nerve injury, the Europeans have it easier. Their same technique in all likelihood could result in much higher nerve injury rates on a different population.



I stick to doing blocks on adults not under GA if at all possible. There is no benefit to me to do it under GA. Doesn't save time. Adds a little risk, even if only in the medico-legal sense.

Nerve injuries happen. Any institution doing enough of them will see plenty if they look for them hard enough. If they aren't looking, of course they won't find them.
I like U/S. I do inplane the majority of the time. I still do an occasional NS only block.
As long as your skills and technique are solid I doubt there is any difference in complication rates among any of the techniques.

IMHO, avoid even touching the nerves (esp. the small nerves) if possible and limit the needle passes around the nerves to the number actually needed for block success.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 03:23 AM   #41
Senior Member
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,237
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
I like U/S. I do inplane the majority of the time. I still do an occasional NS only block.
As long as your skills and technique are solid I doubt there is any difference in complication rates among any of the techniques.

IMHO, avoid even touching the nerves (esp. the small nerves) if possible and limit the needle passes around the nerves to the number actually needed for block success.
I also do nearly every block with ultrasound and am quite deft with it. And complications can still happen. But I think some complications are far less likely with the ultrasound. For example, intravascular injection or pneumothorax rates have to be an order of magnitude lower than a blind technique if you know what you are doing. I mean it's hard to get a pneumothorax on a supraclavicular block under u/s if you are never near the lung.
Mman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 11:22 AM   #42
New Member
 
Gasmachine's Avatar
 
Status Attending
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 3

Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by BLADEMDA View Post
Ridiculous. My Group has placed about 14,000 Femoral nerve blocks in PACU after the spinlas have worn off. Our postop complications are minimal (only one patient complained of pain/neuritis for 6 months). The idea that any Physician thinks you need to wait 24 hours after a spinal (after the Lovenox may have been started) is preposterous and without any evidence.
Preposterous as it may sound, but I have yet to see RCT or hard data showing that it is safe to do lower extremity nerve blocks after spinal anesthesia or when the spinal is still effective. We state, discuss, and debate on the issue but I have yet to see any hard data, and I don't mean some obscure case report or retrospective data. Do you have any societal recommendation (ie ASRA), expert panel recommendation that can vouch for this practice? Just because there is no data showing it is unsafe does not mean it is prudent to practice that way.

I admit that I have no data supporting the way I practice but do not forget... First do no harm. No one can cite you for doing no harm. I am glad there are anesthesia cowboys out there that will push our field further; otherwise no one will study these important practices and provide us with hard data and actual evidence.

I practice what's in textbooks for a reason. Textbooks are written and established over years of publication. Yes some practices, drugs, and recommendations can change significantly by the time a new textbook gets published, but that's what the ASA practice guidelines, ASRA and other national societies fill in the gap. Hey, just my two cents no need to be offended. I am certainly not trying to push my way of practice on anyone.
Gasmachine is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 12:16 PM   #43
Laugh at me, will they?
 
pgg's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Embracing The Suck
Posts: 6,037
SDN Moderator Navy SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

Maybe you said and I missed it, but why do you want to do FNBs after a spinal in the first place? Extra duration vs a preop block?

Aside from the very occasional rescue block, why do them in PACU vs preop? For rescue blocks ... if they're hurting enough that one is warranted, then I'd feel comfortable with assuming the spinal has worn off enough to not be a factor.
__________________
If wishes was horses, we'd all be eatin' steak.
pgg is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 12:20 PM   #44
Ride
 
sevoflurane's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,764
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

How about this one...

If you feel the need to do both (spinal for the case +/- duramorph and FNB for POPM)

Do the FNB first and then the spinal....

sevoflurane is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 12:53 PM   #45
Ride
 
sevoflurane's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,764
SDN 7+ Year Member
Default

BTW... I know of a couple of groups that do this... One of them a 40 MD group in a ACT model.

Spinal then FNB.

Not my cup of tea.

I'm a FNB>LMA kinda dude.
sevoflurane is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 04:38 PM   #46
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pgg View Post
Maybe you said and I missed it, but why do you want to do FNBs after a spinal in the first place? Extra duration vs a preop block?

Aside from the very occasional rescue block, why do them in PACU vs preop? For rescue blocks ... if they're hurting enough that one is warranted, then I'd feel comfortable with assuming the spinal has worn off enough to not be a factor.
For single shot blocks doing the FNB in PACU can mean an extra 5-6 hours of postop pain relief for the patent over doing the block preop.

In academics many places do a FNB preop then a spinal in the OR. This is common throughout many academic centers.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-30-2012, 05:04 PM   #47
5K+ Member
 
BLADEMDA's Avatar
 
Status: Attending
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southeast
Posts: 9,548
SDN 5+ Year Member
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sevoflurane View Post
BTW... I know of a couple of groups that do this... One of them a 40 MD group in a ACT model.

Spinal then FNB.

Not my cup of tea.

I'm a FNB>LMA kinda dude.

I think this technique is safe using u/s. but, a complication or two is likely after several thousand FNB in any Patient population. Now, if and when a patient seeks an attorney there is more wiggle room to sue the Anesthesiologist. Would this complication have been prevented if the spinal block was not in place or feedback was utilized? I think the answer Is no but others may be willing to testify in court that placing a FNB under an active SAB is deviation from the standard of care. Hence, those guys must defend that practice as safe along with the complication. Why do you want that headache?

Ultimately, the decision is yours but until solid evidence is published regarding blocks under GA/SAB in adults I will continue to do these block in unanesthetized patients.
BLADEMDA is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
PERIPHERAL NERVE & SPINAL NERVE confusion?!?! KiTmAn NBDE Exams & Licensure Exams 5 01-19-2009 12:53 PM
posterior femoral cutaneous nerve block nvrsumr Pain Medicine 6 09-11-2008 11:03 AM
Femoral Nerve Catheter USAnesthesiaDoc Anesthesiology 24 05-21-2008 06:45 PM
Femoral block in ambulatory cases Dinkyconductor Anesthesiology 13 04-14-2008 06:49 PM
ipsilateral vagus nerve block with interscalene block? zippy2u Anesthesiology 10 02-23-2008 08:17 AM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:33 PM.


Comments are closed.