What do you mean by so many? I think I've had one spinal fail.
I'd guesstimate somewhere in the neighborhood of 1-2% of spinals for ortho procedures fail. Spinals for csections almost never fail. Why??? I have no idea.
What do you mean by so many? I think I've had one spinal fail.
I'd guesstimate somewhere in the neighborhood of 1-2% of spinals for ortho procedures fail. Spinals for csections almost never fail. Why??? I have no idea.
I imagine getting CSF back initially, then needle inadvertently moved out of thecal space while hooking up the syringe and injecting
no, I'm referring to situations with perfect CSF flow including aspiration after injection. Obviously the occasionally iffy flow is bound to fail more likely. Ortho spinals just fail more often.
I've never had that experience or noticed this. We do lots of ortho cases.
I imagine getting CSF back initially, then needle inadvertently moved out of thecal space while hooking up the syringe and injecting
Don't most people aspirate a little bit of CSF after hooking up the syringe, for confirmation?
Don't most people aspirate a little bit of CSF after hooking up the syringe, for confirmation?
If you have csf dripping back what more confirmation do you need
Every section/spinal I've performed, I have had the attending instruct me to aspirate csf for swirl. Reason being (especially when performed a cse) how do you know that fluid isn't the saline or local dripping out? I think I'm confident enough now to be sure of my technique, but I partially agree with that. After all, how do you know that firearm isn't loaded unless you observe the empty chamber?
Every section/spinal I've performed, I have had the attending instruct me to aspirate csf for swirl. Reason being (especially when performed a cse) how do you know that fluid isn't the saline or local dripping out? I think I'm confident enough now to be sure of my technique, but I partially agree with that. After all, how do you know that firearm isn't loaded unless you observe the empty chamber?
Used 0.5% isobaric bupivacaine for a csection yesterday for the hell of it (used it many times for ortho but not previously for OB) and it worked fine. Probably couldn't even tell you if I was blinded what it was. Her levels got at least T4-5 or so as she did the "I can't breathe" thing because her chest was numb (not the high spinal whisper of I can't breathe) and her pressure dropped enough to need several doses of vasopressor to smooth it out. I used about 2.4 mls (12 mg) as I figured that was roughly a standard dose of hyperbaric that most people use.
Standard dose for ob? I think a lot of people use 7.5-10 for joints
yes for OB.
I also can't fathom only using 7.5 mg of bupivacaine for a total joint. I mean why? If I am using bupivacaine for a joint it's because I would like it to last a little while and the patient benefits from extended pain relief postop. If I want something faster to send someone home ASAP I use mepivacaine.
I use 7.5mg iso and get a solid 3hrs out of it. I’m going to try mepi here soon based on feedback from the SDN brain trust, but I’m very skeptical that my surgeons are fast enough for it.
I’ve never tried iso 7.5 for a joint but when I use 10 for knees/hips patients are moving roughly 2 hours later in the pacu. Also, unless I run them real deep on propofol at incision I see a lot of movement or groaning on skin incision. This is like 20 minutes post spinal. My 0.5 isobaric bupi sounds very different than yours and it’s why I also said it wouldn’t be ideal for CS as we typically incise within 10 minutes of the spinal on a standard CS.
I’ve never tried iso 7.5 for a joint but when I use 10 for knees/hips patients are moving roughly 2 hours later in the pacu. Also, unless I run them real deep on propofol at incision I see a lot of movement or groaning on skin incision. This is like 20 minutes post spinal. My 0.5 isobaric bupi sounds very different than yours and it’s why I also said it wouldn’t be ideal for CS as we typically incise within 10 minutes of the spinal on a standard CS.
Strange choices of dosing on the bupivacaine. They used more isobaric than hyperbaric. At equivalent doses, isobaric lasts longer so certainly no surprise that the iso bupivacaine did so poorly. Ropivacaine is nice in the isobaric form as it’s lower potency cancels out the usual longer duration of its isobaric form.Read this yesterday and found it helpful as someone who hasn’t used mepiv and only used iso when we didn’t have hyperbaric.
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Mepivacaine versus Bupivacaine Spinal Anesthesia for Early... : Anesthesiology
s study was designed to test the hypothesis that patients who received mepivacaine would ambulate earlier than those who received hyperbaric or isobaric bupivacaine for primary total hip arthroplasty. Methods This randomized controlled trial included American Society of Anesthesiologists...pubs.asahq.org