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- Attending Physician
Locums does a spinal and FNB for a TKA. The following day the pt has a complete foot drop. Surgeon tells pt it is most likely residual spinal effects.😱 2 months later foot drop still there.
Can spinal or FNB cause a foot drop?
How do you pursue this?
Locums does a spinal and FNB for a TKA. The following day the pt has a complete foot drop. Surgeon tells pt it is most likely residual spinal effects.😱 2 months later foot drop still there.
Can spinal or FNB cause a foot drop?
How do you pursue this?
Can spinal or FNB cause a foot drop?
How do you pursue this?
). It's just my job to follow up on this pt as I am the director and the locums guy is, well a locums.As far as the surgeon, well he's an idiot. He take s forever to do a TKA (4-5 hrs) and has 2 tourniquet times of 90 and 60 minutes. My partners and I don't do regional on his cases b/4 surgery at all. Maybe post-op after we can evaluate neural fxn. It really sucks for his pts.
Maybe that's why he chose to blame anesthesia for this one. Saw something new (spinal and FNB), and thought it was the unique case occurrence that led to his [surgical] complication.
No, all his partners pts get FNB, +/- ScNB, and spinal. No GA. He knows we treat his pts differently and why. He is very aware of his inabilities.😉
What approach do you favor for the sciatic block when doing a combined FNB, SCI, SAB? I have been doing primarily FNB and SAB for my knees, but I am thinking about trying to add in a subgluteal approached sciatic block with the patient in the same lateral decubitus position that I use to place the SAB. That way I could do a quick FNB supine, up into decubitus, sciatic block, SAB, to OR.
-pod