Case 52 - brachial plexus anesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

What are side effects / complications from an interscalene nerve block?

A
  • phrenic nerve blockade
  • nerve injury
    • phrenic nerve
    • long thoracic nerve
    • dorsal scapular nerve
  • horner syndrome
  • SA puncture/dural sleeve injection
  • vertebral artery puncture (anterior to roots)
  • recurrent laryngeal nerve blockade
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2
Q

What are benefits of ultrasound use?

A
  • decrease time to block performance
  • decrease vascular punctures
  • decrease needle passes
  • faster onset of sensory block, increase block success
  • lower volume of LA (may benefit avoiding phrenic N blockade)
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3
Q

What is LAST, how is it diagnosed?

A

LAST

  • intravascular accumulation of LA
  • typically see CNS symptoms before CVS symptoms
  • CVS: CNS toxic dose ratio

CNS

  • tinnitus
  • metallic taste
  • circumoral nubness
  • excitation/agitation
  • end result –> seziures and resp arrest

CVS

  • brady cardia
  • ventric arrhythmias
  • cardiac arrest

CVS: CNS toxicity ratio

  • highest for bupivaine (1:2) = twice the CNS toxic dose to obtain CVS toxicity
    • lidocaine (1:7) = seven times the CNS toxic dose to obtain CVS toxicity
  • bupi = lipid-soluble agent, binds to inactivated sodium channels for a long time
    • more resistent to tx
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4
Q

Patient is experiencing cardiac arrrest from LAST. How will you treat this?

A

1) Get Help
2) Airway Managment

  • ventlate with 100% oxygen
  • ??hyperventilate??
  • avoid hypoxia/hypercarbia –> exacerbates CVS toxicity

3) Suppress seziures

  • BZD
  • avoid propofol if cardiovascular instability develops

4) cardiac arrhythmias

  • ACLS
  • Ventricular arrhythmias - tx with amiodarone
  • avoid vasopressin, CCB, BB, or LA
  • reduce epinephrine dose to 10-100 mcg bolus (high doses linked to poor outcome in these pts)

5) LIPID EMULSION (20%) therapy
* lipid sink and cause redistribution of LA away from cardiac Na+ channels and into the lipid bilayer

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5
Q

What are the pros and cons of hyperventilation in LAST

A

Pros:

  • cerebral vasoconstrict –> dec CBF –> dec LA delivery to brain
  • decrease ionized form of LA (active form required to block sodium channel receptors)
  • dec PaCo2 leads to inc PAO2 via alverolar oxygenation equation
    • PAo2 = FIo2 (Patm-Ph2o) - (PaCo2/R)

Cons:

  • hypokalemia
  • more LA in non-ionised form (although not active form, this form has greater ability to cross lipid membranes)

A base in an alkaline solution will be non-ionised and have a greater ability to cross lipid membranes. However, in an acid environment, it will be trapped, as it is ionised. The result is that an alkaline drug will be concentrated in a compartment with a low pH.

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6
Q

Describe dosing of lipid emulsion therapy in LAST

A

Lipid Emulsion therapy - for 70kg patient

Initial:

  • Bolus 1.5 mL/kg over 1 min (approx 100mL)
  • continuous infusion 0.25 ml/kg/min (approx 18 mL per min)

if remains HD instable

  • repeat bolus once or twice for peristent CV collapse
  • double continous infusion rate to 0.5 ml/kg/min if BP remains low

maintenance

  • continue infusion for at least 10 min after attaining HD stability
  • recommended upper limit: approx 10 mL/kg over first 30 min
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