Spinals and Epidurals Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the vertebrae

A
33, building blocks of the spine
7 cervical
12- thoracic
5 lumbar
5 sacral (fused)
high curves: C5 L3
Low curves: T5 S2
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Ligaments of the spine

A

Purpose is to stabilize vertebral body

  1. Supraspinous- think
  2. Interspinous- touches the tips of spinous processes
  3. Ligamentum flavum- thick and deep right before ED space
  4. Longitudinal- behind vertebral body
  5. Ligamentum nuchae
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Describe Ligamentum flavum

A

Extends from the foramen magnum to the sacral hiatus, extends down entire back, tough ligament made of elastin, thickest at midline L3, 3-5mm, “yellow ligament” Varies in thickness down spine

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Describe the spinal meninges

A

Protective membranes continuous with cranial meninges

Arachnoid, dura, pia

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Describe the Dura Mater

A

Thickest meningeal tissue
begins at foramen magnum and ends at S2
Abuts the arachnoid mater (subdural space)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Arachnoid mater

A

Primary physiological barrier for drugs to cross epidural to spinal cord
Abuts the pia mater (subarachnoid space)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Subarachnoid space

A

Contains CSF, where we deliver “spinal”, continuous with the cranial CSF to reach brain, houses the spinal nerve roots and rootlets

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Pia mater

A

Adheres to the spinal cord

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Describe the spinal cord

A

Foramen magnum to conus medullaris, L1-L2, gives rise to 31 pairs of spinal nerves, roots (sensory and motor) roots comprised of rootlets. We try to hit posterior root (sensory) but we get motor. Dorsal roots are very large, greater surface area, easier blocked. Anterior motor root smaller.
Dural sac ends at S2

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What are dermatomes?

A

Portion of spinal cord that gives rise to rootlets of a single spinal nerve is called segment. Dermatomes is the skin area innervated by a spinal nerve and its segment.
T4 (nipple), t6 (xiphoid), T8 (last rib), T10 (umbilicus)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Describe the physiology of a neural blockade

A

Local anesthetic bathes the nerve roots in that space.
Subarachnoid (spinal) local anesthetic into CSF
Epidural (or caudal)- LA injected into epidural or caudal space
Overall goal is sensory blockade, we get inadvertent motor
*blockade can occur at an point and all points along neural pathway. from site of drug admin to interior of cord.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Describe the physiology of a neural blockade PART 2

A

Blocks all impulses regardless of fiber type: nociceptive, motor, proprioceptive, autonomic
Autonomic is also blocked, but goal is to do nociceptive fibers

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Benefits of neuroaxial blockade

A

decreased metabolic stress to surgery or anesthesia compared with GA
avoids airway instrumentation
Decreases post op N/V
less intraop sedation required
Post-op pain relief
Allows patient to remain awake during C section

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Disadvantages of neuroaxial blockade

A

Hypotension, slower case start if placement is difficult, failure rate depends on experience, urban legends

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Considerations for choosing a regional technique

A

Anatomy: scoliosis, contractures, BMI
Age: affects dose, increased age means lower dose req.
Pregnancy- reduced volume in epidural space, compression of vena cava can decrease CO
pathophysiology: valve disease

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Indications for SAB vs Epidural

A

sensory level of anesthesia required vs. adverse physiological effects of regional anesthesia, ex. severe COPD, needs muscles to expire (thoracic)
Consider length of surgery, post-op analgesia needs, co-existing diseases; combined SAB with CLE, or combo GA/RA (major abdominal cases, lower extremity vascular cases); used for analgesia postop or for L and D.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Absolute contraindications for spinal block

A
Patient refusal
infection at injection site
coagulopothies
severe hypovolemia/hemorrhage
CNS disease or meningitis
Hysteria
Bactermia or septicemia
18
Q

Cardiovascular effects

A

effects depend on spread and blockade of the ANS. Venous dilation > arterial
SVR (15-25 %) and CO (10-15%) decreases
HR decreases as T1-T4 contain cardioaccelerators, unopposed vagal and decreased atrial baroreceptors.
MAP decreases

19
Q

Pulmonary effects

A

low levels of blockade have minimal effect
As block ascends, accessory muscle paralysis occurs. No direct effect unless a high blockade, C3-C5 is phrenic.
With profound hypotension might see ischemia of central respiratory centers causes respiratory arrest

20
Q

GI/Renal effects

A

N/V, hyperperistalsis, flow to liver is BP dependent so must maintain MAP, renal blood flow is auto regulated tho, bladder urinary retention, avoid excessive IV fluids

21
Q

Metabolic/Endocrine effects

A

Blocks the stress response to surgery, catecholamine release blocked from adrenal medulla, cortisol secretion delayed, shivering, altered thermoregulation with vasodilation

22
Q

Positioning

A

Positioning is crucial
Lateral decubitus- forehead to knees, thighs flexed to abdomen
Sitting: low lumbar sacral block, improves midline anatomy
R hip fracture, R hip down for gravity’s effects

23
Q

Spinal anesthesia needle types

A
Pencil point needles (sprout)- designed to help spread the fibers and reduce PDPH, feel a pop as point punctures dura, increased tip strength
Cutting needle (Quincke)- dural pop is less likely, increased risk of PDPH d/t trauma to dura
24
Q

What are the needle approach techniques?

A

Median- most common approach needle or introducer is placed midline, perpendicular to spinous process, slightly cephalid*
Paramedian- indicated in patients who cannot flex, needle placed 1.5cm laterally and slightly caudad.*

25
Q

What are the two approaches to the epidural placement?

A

LOR- needle advanced until the interspinous ligament, glass syringe attached.
Hanging drop method- needle advanced until interspinous ligament, then a drop of solution is placed in hub of needle.

26
Q

What are the sites for epidural insertion (3)

A

thoracic, caudal, lumbar

27
Q

How far will you insert the epidural catheter?

A

2-3 cm in epidural space, 4-6 cm in epidural space

In the lumbar area, ligamentum flavum is 4cm from skin, 5-6 mm thick in lumbar region.

28
Q

Describe the epidural space

A

Widest point is at L2, 5mm, contains fat and blood vessels, closed space, medication and catheter is deposited into a potential space

29
Q

Describe the ligamentum flavum

A

Depth from skin is 4 cm, (80% of people is between 3.5-8 cm) thickest in the lumbar region at 5-6 mm thick.

30
Q

What factors affect the spread of spinal anesthesia

A

Density- weight in grams of 1 ml of a soution at a specified temperature
Specific gravity- ratio of the density of the solution to another substance’s density
Baracity- density of a solution to the density of another substance
Depends on if the solution is hyperbaric, hypobaric, isobaric
*position, concentration, level of injection, rate of injection, direction of needle and bevel
*height affected by dose, site of injection, baracity, position of patient

31
Q

Describe baracity and it’s effects

A

The specific gravity of a solution can be altered by the addition of dextrose/water.
Hyperbaric addition of dextrose, LA settles independent areas
Hypobaric- mix LA with sterile water, (hemhroid surgery)
Isobaric- mix local anesthetic with CSF
CSF= 1.004-1.008

32
Q

Things to consider when dosing spinal blocks

A

Surgical site, length of procedure, body size (height and weight) physiology

33
Q

When can the patient be discharged?

A

Can go to PACU after a 4 dermatome regression <T10, stable and comfortable
Can go home after ambulation and void, without orthostatic changes

34
Q

Spread of the epidural block depends on what? and what is dosing?

A

Volume and concentration, you give a large volume of a dilute solution. 1.25-1.6 ml of LA per segment

35
Q

Describe the caudal block

A

Involves delivery of local anesthetic to the epidural space via injection through the sacral hiatus, landmarks:
sacral cornu
Posterior superior illiac spine
Sacral hiatus

36
Q

what are the indications and limitations of a caudal block?

A

Indications: pediatric post op pain, hypospadious, inguinal hernia repair, peri area surgeries
Limitations: variable anatomy in adults, high risk of injection to venous plexus, difficulty maintaining sterility

37
Q

Complications of Spinal/Epidural/Caudal?

A

Hypotension, bradycardia, sudden MI, NV, IV injections, intrathecal injections, catheter shearing, postural puncture headache, high blockade, neurologic complications, inadequate blockade, back ache, meningitis, urinary retention
*EPIDURAL HEMATOMA

38
Q

PDPH increased incidence?

A

Young, caucasion, female, large needles, pregnancy, dehydrated, cutting tip needle, multiple puncture attempts
1-4% incidence, occurs one day to one week, treatment is bed rest, hydration, oral analgesics, abdominal binder, saline or blood injection ,caffiene

39
Q

Epidural blood patch

A

Forms a clot over the meningeal hole, 10-20ml of autologous blood draw, inject at epidural level at same level or below, >90% effective, side effects back ache and radicular pain

40
Q

Epidural hematoma

A

Primary causeis coagulation defect, can have numbness or lower extremity weakness, consult neurosurgery within 6-8 hours, hold LMWH 12 hours before the placement of epidural and 12 hours after the surgery .

41
Q

Local anesthetic toxicity

A

Neurologic symptoms, circumoral numbness, tinnitus, vision changes, dizziness, restlessness, muscle twitching, seizures, CNS depression

  • transient radicular irritation
  • cauda equina syndrom (often caused by continuous infusion)