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JOIN THE DISCUSSION - TOP If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, or would like to share with other professionals a comment or opinion on a topic related to ambulatory anesthesia then please "Join the Discussion" here. To enter the Discussion with a question, reply, or other comment, please contact us. Your submission will be published in this section of the next available issue of SAMBA TALKS. Include your name (or initials), city, and state, if you would like these published. Please note that because of the high volume of questions we receive, there is often a delay of 1 to 2 months before the questions can be published. Questions and responses from previous months are now available at the eNewsletter Discussion Archive. If you have any comments regarding the previous questions, please submit them to SAMBA Discussion, and they will be published here next month. Please note: The information presented in the replies below does not represent SAMBA policy. The replies are solely the opinions of the individuals who wrote them.
ABDOMINOPLASTY and POST-OPERATIVE PAIN We are just starting to do "tummy tucks" at our ambulatory surgery center. Are there any special techniques for post-op pain control that other centers are having success using? -- From T. Wilhite, M.D., Missouri REPLY: With regards to "tummy tucks," or abdominoplasty, a very successful technique to both reduce GA requirements procedure, and to provide postoperative pain control, is the paravertebral block (PVB). In the preoperative holding area or induction room, the patient is placed sitting with monitors and oxygen in place, and is sedated with midazolam and fentanyl. The midpoint of the spinous process of T2-T10 is marked, and a point 2.5 cm lateral to this is marked on each side of the spinous process. Local anesthestic is infiltrated along a line connecting these points unilaterally on each side of the spinous process. Then, using a 22 gauge Tuohy needle, 3-4 mL of 0.5 % Ropivicaine is injected 1 cm deep to the transverse process at these points bilaterally at each level. Since, yes, up to 18 individual injections are involved, the subcutaneous local anesthetic placed before the procedure is a very important factor in ensuring patient comfort. -- From Don Siwek, M.D., Bloomfield Hills, Michigan ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Don Siwek describes using paravertebral blocks from T2 to T10 to provide intraoperative and postoperative analgesia in abdominoplasty. In the cases I have seen, the more caudad incision is made in roughly the T11 dermatome, and dissection/undermining is carried out caudad to that incision. Why does Dr. Siwek stop at T10? I am also surprised
that going as high as T2 is useful here. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Clarification, for breast surgery, I block T2-T 6-7, for abdominoplasty T5-6 to T10-11. I have found the undermining that takes place, sometimes up to the xiphoid is the most uncomfortable postop. They usually remove an eliptical pannus just below the umbilicus as you noted but I think since that tissue is removed, only the inferior incision edge and the inferior undermining (1-2 dermatomes ) is sore. Also, I avoid going too low because these levels are estimates at times and if L1 is inadvertantly blocked directly or by spread some quadricep weakness could occur. Thanks for your reply, -- From - Don Siwek, MD
In the brave new world of office-based anesthesia and surgery, what can be done on a cost-effective and convenient basis to make sure that patients, who usually arrive in the facility minutes before their procedure, are adequately prepared? -- From Anonymous
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