Faculty Opinions recommendation of Ilioinguinal/iliohypogastric blocks in children: where do we administer the local anesthetic without direct visualization?

Author(s):  
Anne M Lynn
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Nishchint Sharma ◽  
Bharti Choudhary

Use of USG in regional nerve blocks is increasing day by day. With the help of USG clinician can view real time image of patient’s anatomy, which offers a new standard in nerve location and needle placement. It allows direct visualization of local anesthetic spread around the nerve. USG guided nerve blocks allow reliable and safe anaesthesia and analgesia. USG is a blessing in a way that, it offers high success rate with low complications, in regional nerve blocks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (20) ◽  
pp. 4659
Author(s):  
Dusica M. Stamenkovic ◽  
Mihailo Bezmarevic ◽  
Suzana Bojic ◽  
Dragana Unic-Stojanovic ◽  
Dejan Stojkovic ◽  
...  

Local anesthetic wound infiltration (WI) provides anesthesia for minor surgical procedures and improves postoperative analgesia as part of multimodal analgesia after general or regional anesthesia. Although pre-incisional block is preferable, in practice WI is usually done at the end of surgery. WI performed as a continuous modality reduces analgesics, prolongs the duration of analgesia, and enhances the patient’s mobilization in some cases. WI benefits are documented in open abdominal surgeries (Caesarean section, colorectal surgery, abdominal hysterectomy, herniorrhaphy), laparoscopic cholecystectomy, oncological breast surgeries, laminectomy, hallux valgus surgery, and radical prostatectomy. Surgical site infiltration requires knowledge of anatomy and the pain origin for a procedure, systematic extensive infiltration of local anesthetic in various tissue planes under direct visualization before wound closure or subcutaneously along the incision. Because the incidence of local anesthetic systemic toxicity is 11% after subcutaneous WI, appropriate local anesthetic dosing is crucial. The risk of wound infection is related to the infection incidence after each particular surgery. For WI to fully meet patient and physician expectations, mastery of the technique, patient education, appropriate local anesthetic dosing and management of the surgical wound with “aseptic, non-touch” technique are needed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion Weintraud ◽  
Peter Marhofer ◽  
Adrian Bösenberg ◽  
Stephan Kapral ◽  
Harald Willschke ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
S. W. Hui ◽  
T. P. Stewart

Direct electron microscopic study of biological molecules has been hampered by such factors as radiation damage, lack of contrast and vacuum drying. In certain cases, however, the difficulties may be overcome by using redundent structural information from repeating units and by various specimen preservation methods. With bilayers of phospholipids in which both the solid and fluid phases co-exist, the ordering of the hydrocarbon chains may be utilized to form diffraction contrast images. Domains of different molecular packings may be recgnizable by placing properly chosen filters in the diffraction plane. These domains would correspond to those observed by freeze fracture, if certain distinctive undulating patterns are associated with certain molecular packing, as suggested by X-ray diffraction studies. By using an environmental stage, we were able to directly observe these domains in bilayers of mixed phospholipids at various temperatures at which their phases change from misible to inmissible states.


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 319-319
Author(s):  
Naoto Sassa ◽  
Ryohei Hattori ◽  
Yoshinari Ono ◽  
Tokunori Yamamoto ◽  
Momokazu Gotoh

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Heiss ◽  
Frank W. Roemer ◽  
Christoph Lutter ◽  
Rolf Janka ◽  
Volker Schöffl ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document