Effectiveness of regional anaesthesia for treatment of facial and hand wounds by emergency physicians: A 9-month prospective study
Autor: | L Vatin, D. Vinciguerra, Eric Meaudre, R Siaffa, Guillaume Lacroix, Julien Bordes, Bertrand Prunet |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Injections sites Emergency Medical Services Adolescent Lidocaine Pain Regional anaesthesia Wrist Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Anesthesia Conduction 030202 anesthesiology Physicians Humans Medicine Prospective Studies Anesthetics Local Child Prospective cohort study Facial Injuries Aged Aged 80 and over business.industry Infant Newborn Hand Injuries Infant Nerve Block 030208 emergency & critical care medicine General Medicine Emergency department Middle Aged Treatment Outcome Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Child Preschool Anesthesia Anesthetic Female Anatomic Landmarks business Complication medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine. 37:577-581 |
ISSN: | 2352-5568 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.accpm.2018.02.011 |
Popis: | Objective We compared the effectiveness of nerve blocks (regional anaesthesia, [RA]) versus local anaesthesia (LA) to treat face and hand wounds. Emergency physicians who had not previously used nerve blocks administered the anaesthesia based on anatomic landmarks. Methods This prospective observational open study was conducted at a military teaching hospital emergency department (ED) between May 1, 2013 and January 31, 2014. All patients requiring treatment of facial or hand wounds were included. The primary outcome was anaesthesia effectiveness 15 minutes post-administration. We also recorded the number of injections sites, injected volume, pain of administration, operator comfort, and complications. Lidocaine anaesthesia without epinephrine was used. Results Of the 1090 treated patients, 617 patients were included in the analysis: 316 with hand wounds and 301 with facial wounds. Overall, 130 wrist blocks and 63 facial blocks were performed. RA effectiveness was comparable to that of LA: for facial wounds, RA = 88.9% versus LA = 89% (P = 0.86); for hand wounds, RA = 82.2% versus LA = 90.1% (P = 0.15). RA groups had significantly fewer injections than the LA groups, and less anesthetic was injected in the facial RA group. The pain of anaesthesia administration and operator comfort was similar. There was no complication during the 9-month data collection period. Conclusion Facial and wrist nerve blocks are easy to administer and as efficient as local infiltrations, plus they require fewer injection sites, and, for facial RA, less anesthetic. Their teaching and use should be more widespread in EDs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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