Electromagnetic interference (EMI) is a known risk factor for triggering inappropriate therapy from implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs). Recommendations from the American Society of Anesthesiologists focus on EMI when using monopolar electrocautery for supraumbilical surgeries. Infraumbilical surgeries are not considered high risk for EMI; thus, no magnet must be applied routinely to prevent inappropriate ICD therapy intraoperatively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReg Anesth Pain Med
August 2018
Background: The American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine guidelines recommend discontinuation of warfarin and an international normalized ratio (INR) of 1.2 or less before a neuraxial injection. The European and Scandinavian guidelines accept an INR of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incidence of back pain after neuraxial anesthesia in the adult population is not different from that after general anesthesia. The pain is usually mild, localized in the low back, rarely radiates to the lower extremities, and has a duration of only a few days. The risk factors for development of back pain include the lithotomy position, multiple attempts at block placement, duration of surgery longer than 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objectives: Before bifurcation, the sciatic nerve is composed of 2 component nerves encased in a common investing extraneural layer (CIEL). We examined the effect of various volumes injected beneath the CIEL on the success and duration of sciatic nerve block.
Methods: Ultrasound-guided nerve-stimulator-assisted sciatic nerve blocks were performed on 142 subjects.
Case Rep Anesthesiol
December 2012
With recent advancements in clinical science, an increasing number of patients with congenital heart defects are surviving into adulthood and presenting for noncardiac surgeries. We describe one such example of a 26-year-old patient with corrected hypoplastic left heart syndrome presenting for knee arthroscopy and performed under general anesthesia with preoperative ultrasound guided saphenous nerve block. In this case, we review the anesthetic implications of corrected single ventricle physiology, anesthetic implications, as well as discuss the technique and role of saphenous nerve block in patients undergoing knee arthroscopy.
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