1 / 23

Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blockade in Children

Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blockade in Children. Giorgio Ivani Regina Margherita Children’s Hospital Turin Italy gioivani@libero.it. Postoperative Pain Control and RA. Single shot analgesia, even with the addition of adjuvants is not enough for: - long-term surgery

desma
Télécharger la présentation

Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blockade in Children

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blockade in Children Giorgio Ivani Regina Margherita Children’s Hospital Turin Italy gioivani@libero.it

  2. Postoperative Pain Control and RA Single shot analgesia, even with the addition of adjuvants is not enough for: - long-term surgery - long-term pain

  3. Postoperative Pain Control and RA: techniques • Single Shot : minor surgery • Continuous Infusion: - long-term surgery - painful postop.

  4. Postoperative Pain Control and RA When a long-term pain control is required pain treatment becomes a challenge: - complete pain relief - without interference with the daily life - drugs with as few side effects as possible patient well-being

  5. Continuous Infusion and Outcome • Surgical Stress Control:oesophageal atresia • Optimal Pain Control • Reduced Need of Opioids • Reduced Need of Muscle Relaxants • Ventilatory Support Reduction Bosenberg A et al. Pediatr Surg Int 1992;7:289-91

  6. Is epidural analgesia associated with an improved outcome following open Nissen fundoplication? retrospective study, 104 open Nissen iv morphine infusion:10-40 mcg/kg/h vs epi 0.125% bupivacaine/fentanyl 4 mcg/ml 0.4 ml/kg/h Wilson et al. Paediatr Anaesth 2001;11:65-70

  7. Is epidural analgesia associated with an improved outcome following open Nissen fundoplication? Hospital stay: GA 13 days vs RA 8 days over 7 days discharge: GA 44% vs RA 25% ICU stay: GA 33% vs RA 17% ICU ventilation: GA 21% vs RA 8%

  8. Peripheral Pain Control several techniques/ routes can be used - intramuscolar pain, some drug absorption unpredictability -iv opioids nausea,vomiting,pruritus,urinary retention, GI impairment,respiratory depression -epidural infusion anaesthesia/analgesia also in controlateral leg

  9. Postoperative Pain Control and RA As continuous epidural infusion is a technique of choice when there is a prolonged operation or an intense postoperative pain, why not a peripheral infusion for a peripheral pain?

  10. Continuous Peripheral Blocks In adults it is a well established and commonly performed technique

  11. Peripheral Catheter Positioning - as efficient as epidural continuous infusion - easy to perform - long-term analgesia

  12. Pediatric Data Very Few Papers Mainly Case Reports Usually short term infusion (48h) A review of CPNB in Children Syngelyn. TRAPM 2002,vol 6 n3;108-114

  13. Matuszczak et al.Anesthesiology 2001;95:A1236 brachial plexus block 36 patients; age 2-16 years catheter lasting 2-13 days, mean 4 days arm/and trauma, vascular/congenital surgery,complicated fractures optimal analgesia no complications

  14. Pediatric Data 25 children, major orthopedic surgery CPNB with elastomeric pumps 0.2% ropivacaine 0.1 ml/kg/h mean age 10 yrs mean duration 45 h no complications,no accidental removal Dadure et al. Anesth Analg 2003;97:687-690

  15. Continuous infusions:Safety/Efficacy • Asepsis • Dedicated Pediatric Tools • Nerve Stimulator • Strictly observed Drugs Guide-Lines • Continuous monitoring : instrumental • nurses

  16. Material: needles and catheteres • radial artery catheterization setforaxillary block (Tan et al.Anesth Analg1995;80:640-641) • epidural kit for femoral block (Johnson.Anaesth Int Care 1994;22:281-283) • central venous catheter set for femoral block (Tobias. Anaesth Int Care 1994;22:616-618)

  17. Case Report 1 3 1/2 y, left foot semiamputation sciatic block 15 days of continuous infusion

  18. Case Report 2 3 y old boy right foot semiamputation sciatic block 21 days of continuous infusion Ivani et al. Paediatr Anaesth 2003 ; in press

  19. Case Report 2 bolus dose: 0.2% ropivacaine 0.6 ml/kg + clonidine 2 mcg/kg continuous infusion: 0.2% ropivacaine 0.4 mg/kg/h + clonidine 3 mcg/kg/24h

  20. Case Report 2 • better blood flow • daily wound treatments ( 2-3 times per day) and surgical cleaning without any additional pain killer

  21. Peripheral Catheter Positioning axillary sciatic femoral (fascia iliaca) bl. starting dose 0.25% bupiv., 0.2% ropivacaine 0.4-0.6 ml/kg (Syngelin) 1.5% lidocaine+0.2% ropivacaine (Matuszczack) 0.2% ropiv/levob. 0.3-0.6 ml/kg+ clonidine 2mcg/kg (Ivani)

  22. Peripheral Catheter Positioning continuous infusion 0.125%- 0.25% levobupivacaine, 0.1%-0.2% ropivacaine 0.1-0.3 ml/kg/h 0.2-0.4 mg/kg/h + clonidine 3 mcg/kg/24h 30% reduction for infants < 6 mo

  23. Pediatric Regional Anesthesia:the Future Continuous Infusion: Technical difficulties have been overcome Pediatric tools availability for peripheral continuous infusion: can provide effective analgesia optimizing drugs administration and pain management

More Related