Cargando…

Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene

Peripheral nerve catheter placement is used to control surgical pain. Performing bilateral brachial plexus block with catheters is not frequently performed; and in our case sending patient home with bilateral brachial plexus catheters has not been reported up to our knowledge. Our patient is a 57 ye...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A, Seif, John, Guirguis, Maged, Zaky, Sherif, Mounir-Soliman, Loran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elmer Press 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3279478/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22393345
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr645w
_version_ 1782223694210269184
author Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A
Seif, John
Guirguis, Maged
Zaky, Sherif
Mounir-Soliman, Loran
author_facet Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A
Seif, John
Guirguis, Maged
Zaky, Sherif
Mounir-Soliman, Loran
author_sort Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A
collection PubMed
description Peripheral nerve catheter placement is used to control surgical pain. Performing bilateral brachial plexus block with catheters is not frequently performed; and in our case sending patient home with bilateral brachial plexus catheters has not been reported up to our knowledge. Our patient is a 57 years old male patient presented with bilateral upper extremity digital gangrene on digits 2 through 4 on both sides with no thumb involvement. The plan was to do the surgery under sequential axillary blocks. On the day of surgery a right axillary brachial plexus block was performed under ultrasound guidance using 20 ml of 0.75% ropivacaine. Patient was taken to the OR and the right fingers amputation was carried out under mild sedation without problems. Left axillary brachial plexus block was then done as the surgeon was closing the right side, two hours after the first block was performed. The left axillary block was done also under ultrasound using 20 ml of 2% mepivacaine. The brachial plexus blocks were performed in a sequential manner. Surgery was unremarkable, and patient was transferred to post anesthetic care unit in stable condition. Over that first postoperative night, the patient complained of severe pain at the surgical sites with minimal pain relief with parentral opioids. We placed bilateral brachial plexus catheters (right axillary and left infra-clavicular brachial plexus catheters). Ropivacaine 0.2% infusion was started at 7 ml per hour basal rate only with no boluses on each side. The patient was discharged home with the catheters in place after receiving the appropriate education. On discharge both catheters were connected to a single ON-Q (I-flow Corporation, Lake Forest, CA) ball pump with a 750 ml reservoir using a Y connection and were set to deliver a fixed rate of 7 ml for each catheter. The brachial plexus catheters were removed by the patient on day 5 after surgery without any difficulty. Patient's postoperative course was otherwise unremarkable. We concluded that home going catheters are very effective in pain control postoperatively and they shorten the period of hospital stay. KEYWORDS: Brachial plexus; Home going catheters; Post-operative pain
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3279478
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Elmer Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32794782012-03-05 Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A Seif, John Guirguis, Maged Zaky, Sherif Mounir-Soliman, Loran J Clin Med Res Case Report Peripheral nerve catheter placement is used to control surgical pain. Performing bilateral brachial plexus block with catheters is not frequently performed; and in our case sending patient home with bilateral brachial plexus catheters has not been reported up to our knowledge. Our patient is a 57 years old male patient presented with bilateral upper extremity digital gangrene on digits 2 through 4 on both sides with no thumb involvement. The plan was to do the surgery under sequential axillary blocks. On the day of surgery a right axillary brachial plexus block was performed under ultrasound guidance using 20 ml of 0.75% ropivacaine. Patient was taken to the OR and the right fingers amputation was carried out under mild sedation without problems. Left axillary brachial plexus block was then done as the surgeon was closing the right side, two hours after the first block was performed. The left axillary block was done also under ultrasound using 20 ml of 2% mepivacaine. The brachial plexus blocks were performed in a sequential manner. Surgery was unremarkable, and patient was transferred to post anesthetic care unit in stable condition. Over that first postoperative night, the patient complained of severe pain at the surgical sites with minimal pain relief with parentral opioids. We placed bilateral brachial plexus catheters (right axillary and left infra-clavicular brachial plexus catheters). Ropivacaine 0.2% infusion was started at 7 ml per hour basal rate only with no boluses on each side. The patient was discharged home with the catheters in place after receiving the appropriate education. On discharge both catheters were connected to a single ON-Q (I-flow Corporation, Lake Forest, CA) ball pump with a 750 ml reservoir using a Y connection and were set to deliver a fixed rate of 7 ml for each catheter. The brachial plexus catheters were removed by the patient on day 5 after surgery without any difficulty. Patient's postoperative course was otherwise unremarkable. We concluded that home going catheters are very effective in pain control postoperatively and they shorten the period of hospital stay. KEYWORDS: Brachial plexus; Home going catheters; Post-operative pain Elmer Press 2011-12 2011-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3279478/ /pubmed/22393345 http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr645w Text en Copyright 2011, Abd-Elsayed et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Abd-Elsayed, Alaa A
Seif, John
Guirguis, Maged
Zaky, Sherif
Mounir-Soliman, Loran
Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title_full Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title_fullStr Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title_full_unstemmed Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title_short Bilateral Brachial Plexus Home Going Catheters After Digital Amputation for Patient With Upper Extremity Digital Gangrene
title_sort bilateral brachial plexus home going catheters after digital amputation for patient with upper extremity digital gangrene
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3279478/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22393345
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/jocmr645w
work_keys_str_mv AT abdelsayedalaaa bilateralbrachialplexushomegoingcathetersafterdigitalamputationforpatientwithupperextremitydigitalgangrene
AT seifjohn bilateralbrachialplexushomegoingcathetersafterdigitalamputationforpatientwithupperextremitydigitalgangrene
AT guirguismaged bilateralbrachialplexushomegoingcathetersafterdigitalamputationforpatientwithupperextremitydigitalgangrene
AT zakysherif bilateralbrachialplexushomegoingcathetersafterdigitalamputationforpatientwithupperextremitydigitalgangrene
AT mounirsolimanloran bilateralbrachialplexushomegoingcathetersafterdigitalamputationforpatientwithupperextremitydigitalgangrene