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Can someone walk me through how to do an anterior sciatic block without ultrasound? It seems like it would be a convenient block as you wouldn't have to flip someone over.
Can someone walk me through how to do an anterior sciatic block without ultrasound? It seems like it would be a convenient block as you wouldn't have to flip someone over.
This is one of the few blocks I never use USD. Using it will slow me down. Well, if I'm doing a femoral, I'll look and see where my vessels are, but then I drop it. Feel for the femur, use a 22G stim needle and good sedation, hit femur, walk off the femur (you need to come back to the skin and readjust your angle or you'll bend your needle) and get the appropriate response. I've done them with USD, and besides needing a totally different and expensive mega probe, I find you end up wasting more time, especially with the biggens. I do these exclusively for knees. I can't remember the last time I did a labatt approach.
I've never placed a sciatic catheter via the anterior approach.
My 2 cents.
You want to place your needle 90 degrees to the skin. After hitting the femur and coming back to the skin, you may need to push the skin over a bit to maintain something close to 90 degrees.
If you readjust your angle... remember that small changes proximally equal big changes at the tip of your needle. So small adjustments once you know where your femur is. Visualize it in your head... and remember the sciatic is a big ***** nerve which lives right behind the femur. Sometimes externally rotating the leg is useful.
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Keep at it. It's a great block. 🙂
This is the worst picture I have ever seen. The piriformis comes off from the internal aspect of the sacrum at S2-4 and the sciatic notch is not the PSIS. Look at netter and not this drawing.
Sevo, where is the point of needle entry, ie how far distal on the thigh do you enter? And do you walk medially off the femur?
I tried looking with US. Cant really make out the nerve. What the best place for probe placement? And are you using a high or low freq probe? I find that I cant see the needle with a low freq probe so I tend to avoid it.
Can someone walk me through how to do an anterior sciatic block without ultrasound? It seems like it would be a convenient block as you wouldn't have to flip someone over.
Depends how fat your patients is. Biggens = bigger probe.
I've never done a ant. sciatic catheter, but here are my reservations:
A tuohy needles is a lot bigger than a 22g needle which means if you hit red you may have to hold pressure.
22g hurts, but good sedation makes things much better. I can't imagine what a tuohy needle feels like. How long of a tuohy needle would you use for a regular person? How about someone who has a large caliber thigh? Gotta bring out the harpoon right? Then thread a catheter. Ouch.
Sleepisgood has more experience at placing these catheters than I do. If it can be done safely, efficiently, with good delineation of anatomy and without the patient jumping off the bed, then it's something I would like to look into. If it's being taught then there is something to be said for this technique.
At this point, I prefer subgluteal approach for sciatic catheters.
Hey dude.
I guess you can do with w/ or w/o ultz. The times I've done it, like I said, it's just a single prep of the leg. I can typically do both blocks using the same probe and keep things sterile, so why not?
sevo are you doing these with femorals for tka?
...but no way are we doing anterio sciatics routinely at our teaching institution with 10 attendings on pain service and new junior residents every 30 days.