Background Foot and ankle surgeries are frequently accompanied by a peripheral nerve block in order to reduce postoperative pain. Higher than expected complication rates with peripheral nerve blocks have led to increased concern among surgeons and ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Now, I’m a little older than some of you guys (younger than a few). I know I may sound like an “old fart”, but honestly, I think some folks are getting WAY too “carried away” with trying to do regional on so many folks.
I’ve done too many cases for too many years to believe that most of these folks won’t do just FINE without me sticking needles in their body, next to important motor/sensory nerves. Believe me, they do ok.
Yeah, you can get them out the door a bit faster. Yeah, they may be “more comfortable” for an extra day or two. Then again, look at those studies above. The complication rate is NOT zero. It’s not “practically zero”, either.
If you asked ME as a patient, “Do you want to be more comfortable for an extra day or two, with a possible risk of having a “gimpy” arm or leg for months, or maybe even the rest of your life??”, I’d tell you to let me hurt a little.
Look at the study above on young folks with ACL repair at 6 months. If you were a Jr/Sr high schooler (trying to get a scholarship) or a college athlete, would YOU want regional?? Still weak at 6 months??
I know some of you are “experts”, and never have a complication. Congrats. Studies, and the ASA closed claims data, say different.
Feel free to send me a post card from whatever exotic location your legal deposition takes place at, and tell me if you still think that an extra 24-48 hours of pain control was worth a lifetime of disability and a 6-7 figure plus payout to someone.