Triple Nerve Block at the Knee for Foot and Ankle Surgery Performed by the Surgeon: Difficulties and Efficiency
Author
Varitimidis, S. E.; Venouziou, A. I.; Dailiana, Z. H.; Christou, D.; Dimitroulias, A.; Malizos, K. N.Date
2009Keyword
Abstract
Background: Combined nerve blocks at the knee can provide safe anesthesia below the knee avoiding the potential complications of general or spinal anesthesia while reducing the need for opioids in the postoperative period. This study presents the outcomes of a large series of patients that underwent foot and ankle surgery receiving a triple nerve block at the knee. Materials and Methods: Three hundred eighty patients underwent foot and ankle surgery receiving anesthesia with triple nerve block at the knee (tibial, common peroneal and saphenous nerve). Surgery included a variety of bone and soft tissue procedures. The nerve block was performed by an orthopaedic surgeon in the lateral decubitus position. Results: The successful nerve block rate was 91 percent. There was no need to convert to general or spinal anesthesia, although 34 patients (9%) needed additional analgesia intraoperatively. Complete anesthesia required 25 to 30 minutes from the time of performing the block. No complication occurred secondary to the use of the anesthetic agent (ropivacaine 7.5%). Postoperative analgesia lasted from 5 to 12 hours, reducing the need of additional analgesics. Hospitalization averaged 1.4 days (from 0 to 5) with the majority of patients discharged the day after the operation (248/380). A high satisfaction rate was reported by the patients with no adverse effects and complications. Conclust. on: We found triple nerve block at the knee to be a safe and reliable method of regional anesthesia providing low morbidity, high success rate, long acting analgesia, and fewer complications than general or spinal anesthesia. It is a simple method that can be performed by the orthopaedic surgeon.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Ranolazine-Induced Postrepolarization Refractoriness Suppresses Induction of Atrial Flutter and Fibrillation in Anesthetized Rabbits
Aidonidis, I.; Doulas, K.; Hatziefthimiou, A.; Tagarakis, G.; Simopoulos, V.; Rizos, I.; Tsilimingas, N.; Molyvdas, P. A. (2013)Ranolazine (Ran) is a novel anti-ischemic agent with electrophysiologic properties mainly attributed to the inhibition of late Na+ current and atrial-selective early Na+ current. However, there are only limited data regarding ... -
Interference decoding in cellular wireless relay networks with space-time coding
Argyriou, A. (2014)In this paper we propose a cooperative protocol and a symbol decoding algorithm that target improved performance in the presence of inter-cell interference (ICI) in wireless cellular networks. Our scheme uses the wireless ... -
Continuing versus Stopping Prestroke Antihypertensive Therapy in Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage: A Subgroup Analysis of the Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke Trial
Krishnan K., Scutt P., Woodhouse L., Adami A., Becker J.L., Cala L.A., Casado A.M., Chen C., Dineen R.A., Gommans J., Koumellis P., Christensen H., Collins R., Czlonkowska A., Lees K.R., Ntaios G., Ozturk S., Phillips S.J., Sprigg N., Szatmari S., Wardlaw J.M., Bath P.M., ENOS Investigators (2016)Background and purpose More than 50% of patients with acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) are taking antihypertensive drugs before ictus. Although antihypertensive therapy should be given long term for secondary prevention, ...