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why not just do a femoral nerve block?
How would you do one on a post operative knee?
yeah, with U/S. We do them all the time (must have done 4 today. I'm the med student and I did 2 myself in the last 3 days. I'm kinda pumped because it's one of the coolest things I've done in med school, but also really, really easy). We also do fem catheters, but not as often - I saw one yesterday for a TKA. We usually leave those in overnight and pull the next day so that they can start active PT on POD 2. In my experience (which is not vast), the fem nerve catheters take hardly any more time than femoral blocks, which take much less time than epidurals.
Does the fascia iliaca block work? Yup. Anecdotal 70-80% success rate. I love em damn it. They take me 20-30 seconds to perform from the time I put on my latex gloves. Keys are a b-bevel needle and slow advancement of needle to feel the "2 pops."
how do you do a "fascia iliaca block"?
You mention that this is being done after epidurals are pulled postop on the floor. How long postop is the epidural usually left in place? We do a lot of LP/sciatic and fem/sciatic catheters for total knees that stay in until perhaps POD #2. If we use an epidural it depends on the surgeon how long they want it in, some are POD #1, some are POD #2.
But once whatever catheter they had in is pulled on the floor, it's generally time to be on PO pain meds (unless the catheter failed and they transition to PCA or what not).
POD #1. Not my idea.
What are your surgeons using for DVT prophylaxis? Mine use lovenox. Don't want to be dealing with epidurals, when to pull them what to do if they are accidentally d/c'd, etc.
The fascia iliacus blocks are crap IMHO. And we have them doing PT on POD#1 so continuous blocks are out.
Our routine is intrathecal duramorph and a single shot FNB. I also add the single shot sciatic block thru the anterior approach just below the FNB site for posterior knee pain.
They use lovenox or heparin bridge. PT does start on POD #1. I have found that folks can still do PT with epidural/FNCath.
Never done an anterior approach to the sciatic. In fact nobody at Rush does them that way. Sounds interesting however. SOme of these folks thighs are HUGE though. You gotta shove a 150mm in there?
So you guys time the Lovenox and epidural D/C? Isn't that sort of a PITA?
And I agree that they can do PT with a cath in place but the CFNB cath is pretty limiting with the quads.
Why do some of you need the US for a FNB?
We dont need the US for a FNB. He asked about post op knees. Which I assumed he did not want to use a stim.
Anyway, I just learned the anterior approach to sciatic. Pretty slick since you dont have to reposition and all.
yeah, with U/S. We do them all the time (must have done 4 today. I'm the med student and I did 2 myself in the last 3 days. I'm kinda pumped because it's one of the coolest things I've done in med school, but also really, really easy). We also do fem catheters, but not as often - I saw one yesterday for a TKA. We usually leave those in overnight and pull the next day so that they can start active PT on POD 2. In my experience (which is not vast), the fem nerve catheters take hardly any more time than femoral blocks, which take much less time than epidurals.
Yeah... but the anterior approach covers alot of real estate. If you are going to use USD... you can pick it off laterally. Safer IMHO.
Wow, your anesthesia dept. let's students do nerve blocks and epidurals? When i was a student i wasn't allowed to touch a patient having any of that kind of procedure being done.
Wow, your anesthesia dept. let's students do nerve blocks and epidurals? When i was a student i wasn't allowed to touch a patient having any of that kind of procedure being done.
most people here (not a huge regional place) don't believe in fascia iliaca. Our tkas get us guided fem nerv cath - takes less than 5 minutes and very reliable. About half the time we do a single shot sciatic and then the patients get either a spinal or ga for the case (one surgeon is fast - his get sab, slow surgeon gets ga). They get bid lovenox on pod1 so epidurals are out. We do them for hips and pull them the next day though. The fem cath stays in untill pod2 to transition to po pain meds for discharge. It does not seem to get in the way of pt.