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REGIONAL ANESTHESIA IN THE POST ANESTHESIA RECOVERY ARENA CBSPAN Fall Conference October 2013

CBSPAN Fall Conference October 2013. Disclosure Statement I have no financial or research affiliations with any product or pharmaceutical manufacturer

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REGIONAL ANESTHESIA IN THE

POST ANESTHESIA RECOVERY ARENA

CBSPAN Fall Conference

October 2013

Disclosure Statement

I  have no financial or research affiliations with any product or pharmaceutical

manufacturer displayed in this presentation

-Shafonya Turner, M.D.

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shot block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Discuss expectations in PACU Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications,

concerns of regional anesthesia techniques

Clark Kent : Superman :: Bruce Wayne :

A. Hulk

B. Batman

C. Spiderman

D. Wolverine

Hulk

Batman

Spiderman

Wolverin

e

0% 0%0%0%

A 91yo male presents for RUE AVF for future hemodialysis access. PMHs includes HTN and osteoarthritis. Candidate for regional anesthesia?

A. Yes

B. No

YesNo

0%0%

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shock block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Identify expectation in PACU List options for comprehensive pain management Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications, concerns

of regional anesthesia techniques

Patient selection…

• Everyone is a potential candidate• Infants/neonates• Incapacitated, intubated• Ongoing infection, heart failure, acute psychological or

neurological derailment1

• If the site is blockable, we can block it!! Risk vs. benefit

• Contraindications • PATIENT REFUSAL• Infection at site of needle/catheter placement• Coagulopathy ( i.e. neuraxial and deeper compartmental block

techniques)• Allergy to anesthetizing medications

Lumbar Thoracic

Patient Selection… Great alternative for:

Higher risk GA patients Chronic pain disorders (Decrease incidence of chronic pain

syndromes)6

Same day procedures High incidence of PONV with

○ GA○ Narcotics

High risk pulmonary patients○ Obesity○ COPD○ Rib fracture○ Elderly

Initiation of post-operative rehabilitation (orthopedic, thoracic)

Pamela is scheduled for a partial vulvectomy for vulvar cancer. Is there a regional anesthesia option for her?

A. Yes

B. No

C. Maybe

YesNo

Mayb

e

0% 0%0%

Buying a new house when the sink is stopped up is a plausible option.

A. True

B. False

True

False

0%0%

Patient Selection…

Remember overkill!!

Can selectively block just about anything from the neck down

Patient selection…

Timing always a consideration Surgeon preference and discussion Follow-up capabilities

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shock block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Identify expectation in PACU Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications,

concerns of regional anesthesia techniques

Which technique? Upper extremity

Brachial plexus (interscale, supraclavicular, infraclavicular, axillary, elbow, wrist, digital block)

Bier block Lower extremity

Lumbar plexus, femoral, 3-in1, sciatic (infragluteal, popliteal fossa), ankle block

Bier block Lumbar epidural

Thoracic Intercostal, paravertebral, thoracic epidural

Abdominal Thoracic epidural, TAP (transversus abdominis plane), rectus sheath

Cervical Cervical plexus, occipital nerve

What technique?

Most important question…

Where is the procedure taking place?

Location, Location, Location

Tim is having a nail removed from his ankle several months after an ORIF of a fracture. Which block would be appropriate?

A. Ankle block

B. Femoral block

C. Sciatic block (popliteal or infragluteal)

D. It depends

E. A combination of two of the above

Ankle block

Femora

l block

Sciatic b

lock (p

opliteal o

r...

It depends

A combination of t

wo of...

0% 0% 0%0%0%

What technique?Abdominal region and blocking techniques

TAP-Transversus Abdominis Plane

What technique?

Abdominal region and blocking techniques

Thoracic/ High Lumbar Epidural

What technique?Lower Extremity Surgery and Pain

Usually orthopedic proce-

dures

Vascular (e.g. vein Sclerosing)

What technique?

How long will the procedure take?Question in neuraxial anesthesia

○ Spinal anesthesia is finite in duration unless a catheter left in intrathecal space

○ Epidural anesthesia is more long term (up to 5-7 days)

○ Narcotics in solution also an important point

What technique?

PNB decrease3 duration of hospital stayTotal narcotic useTime to rehabilitation and through rehab

(economic benefit??)5

Other serious complications○ Hypoxia, hypotension, ?DVT?, MI, CVA, GI

distress

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shock block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Identify expectation in PACU Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications,

concerns of regional anesthesia techniques

Dwight presents for R TKA. He refused neuraxial anesthesia options and ops for a peripheral technique. The block team decides to do a femoral and sciatic nerve block. Which one, if any, should get a catheter?

A. Femoral

B. Sciatic

C. Neither

D. Both

Femora

l

Sciatic

Neither

Both

0% 0%0%0%

Single-shot vs Catheters

Decrease narcotic use in catheter patients Decrease LA toxicity and complication due to decrease

rate of injection of LA (local anesthetic )2

In neuraxial anesthesia, possible higher dermatomal spread of LA in combined spinal/epidural vs spinal alone4

Prolonged blockade in catheter

Single Shot vs Catheter

Single Shot vs Catheter

Increase is catheter dislodgement (moisture, friction) and subsequent patient dissatisfaction

Catheter site infection or bacteremic seeding8

Increased technical difficulty in placement with larger needles and longer procedure time

Logistics of catheter management services and staff

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shock block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Identify expectations in PACU Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications,

concerns of regional anesthesia techniques

PACU Expectations

Martha has just come out of R rotator cuff surgery. The surgeons wanted to wait to dose her interscalene catheter until after motor function of her extremity had been confirmed. 10 minutes before arrival to the PACU, she receives 30mL 0.5% Ropivacaine in her catheter. What can you expect?

A. Inability to squeeze your finger with her R hand

B. Incomplete pain relief with no motor function below the elbow

C. Martha will be writhing in pain

D. Little response when you draw blood from her AC fossa

Inability t

o squeeze

your ...

Incomplete pain

relie

f wi..

Marth

a will

be writ

hing i...

Little re

sponse

when you...

0% 0%0%0%

Great Expectations

Failure of epidural analgesia after initial success was observed in 6.8%7

Efficacy of RA ranges 75-85%, depending on block, technical expertise

Failure rates of up to 30% with come brachial plexus techniques.

Great Expectations

Great Expectations

Ranking in order of painfulness

a. A

b. B

c. C

A B C

A B

C

Great Expectations Comes down to experience

Some outpatient centers do 75% of their anesthetics with RA

Quicker recovery, better infrastructure to facilitate the initiative

Prepare patients for the experience/expectation Comes down to commitment

Facility commitment to staffing, space, time, and money

Providers commitment to safe, good care, education, leadership

Objectives Summarize the basics of choosing regional

anesthesia as a perioperative anesthetic options Describe the arbitration of various technique

appropriateness in diverse perioperative clinical scenarios

Recognize the appropriateness of single-shock block vs catheter placement in regional anesthesia

Identify expectations in PACU Discuss drawbacks, risks, complications,

concerns of regional anesthesia techniques

The good, now the bad

Everything has risk and benefitsThese are different for each patient even

with similar co-morbidities and deficits The informed consent Even done perfectly, complications arise All that glitters is not gold

How long does the ASRA say we should wait to place an epidural in a patient in ASA?A. 7 days

B. 5 days

C. 2 days

D. No days

7 days

5 days

2 days

No days

0% 0%0%0%

• Antiplatelet medications (ASA, Plavix, NSAIDs)• Oral anticoagulants (Warfarin)• Standard heparin • LMWH (Lovenox, Aggranox)• Thrombolytic and fibrinolytic therapy (tPA)• Herbal preparations ( Garlic, ginger, feverfew, Ginseng,

Alfalfa, chamomile, horse chestnut, ginseng, Vitamin E, Ginko)

• New anticoagulants

Risks

Bleeding Infection Nerve injury Failure Toxicity (cardiac and neurological)

Risks Patient safety

Prolonged blockade patient should have support at home○ Falls○ Medication toxicity○ Injury to the anesthetized limb○ Inablilty to complete ADL

Given through instructions on pain management and duration of blockade

For those with take home catheters, instructions and removing catheter or given options to return for removal

Drawbacks

Hemodynamic instability – neuraxial anesthesia

Headaches Urinary retention Pneumothorax and vascular injury on

placement Pain/discomfort with block placement Follow up Incomplete relief

References1. Barash 7th edition

2. Analgesic Effectiveness of a Continuous Versus Single-Injection Interscalene Block for MinorArthroscopic Shoulder Surgery Michel J. Fredrickson, MD,* Þ Craig M. Ball, MD,* and Adam J. Dalgleish (Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35: 28Y33) Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine & Volume 35, Number 1, January-February 2010

3. Chelley JE, Continuous femoral blocks improve recovery and outcome of patients undergoing TKA. J arthrophasty 2001

4. Sensorimotor anesthesia and hypotension after subarachnoid block: combined spinal-epidural versus single-shot spinal technique. Goy RW, Sia AT.

5. Capdevila, X. Effects of perioperative analgesic technique on the surgical outcome and duration of rehabilitation after major knee surgery. Anesthesiology 1999;91:8-15

6. Perkins FM. Chronic pain as an outcome of surgery. A review of predictive factors. Anesthesiology 2000;93:11123-1133

7. Pan PH, Bogard TD, Owen MD. Incidence and characteristics of failures in obstetric neuraxial analgesia and anesthesia: a retrospective analysis of 19,259 deliveries. Int J Obstet Anesth 2004;13:227-33.

8. Cuvillon P. The Continuous Femoral Nerve Block Catheter for Postoperative Analgesia: Bacterial Colonization, Infectious Rate and Adverse Effects. Anesth Analg 2001;93:1045–9

9. Finucane B. Complications of Regional Anesthesia. Springer Science. New York. 2007.