Regional Anesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

How is CSF volume related to extent of spinal anesthesia?

A

CSF volume is inversely related to the height of the block

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2
Q

What are the indications for a stellate ganglion block?

A

CRPS 1 and 2 of the upper extremity

phantom limb pain of the upper extremity

refractory angina or VT

vascular insufficiency

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3
Q

What is the relationship of the stellate ganglion to the cervical vertebrae?

A
  • located at C7
  • can be blocked at the transverse process of C6 (tubercle of Chassiagnac)
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4
Q

What indicates a sucessful stellate ganlgion block? Other side effects?

A

** increased temperature of the upper extremity **

also: Horner’s syndrome (sympathetic palsy), hoarseness (recurrent laryngeal palsy, elevated hemidiphragm (phrenic nerve palsy)

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5
Q

What are the compliacations of a stellate ganlgion block?

A

intrathecal injection

vertebral artery injection

pneumothorax

hematoma

esophageal injury

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6
Q

Why is neuraxial anesthesia difficult in patients with ankylosing spondylitis?

A

osseous ligaments and smaller intervertebral space

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7
Q

What is the most frequent complication of an interscalene block?

A

Ipsilateral diaphragmatic paralysis

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8
Q

What forms the intercostobrachial nerve? What does it supply?

A

T2

sensory fibers to the medial upper arm

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9
Q

What is the order of blockade (sympathetic, sensory, motor) for upper extremity, lower extremity, and spinal blocks?

A
  • upper extremity: sympathetic then motor then sensory
  • lower extremity: sympathetic then sensory then motor
  • spinal: sympathetic then sensory then motor
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10
Q

Which nerve is most often missed with an axillary nerve block? What does it supply?

A

musculocutaneous

lateral aspect of the forearm

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11
Q

How can a supplementary block of the musculocutaneous nerve be done?

A

Injection into the body of the choracobrachialis muscle

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12
Q

What is the nerve supply to the hand?

A
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13
Q

Where can the superficial cervical plexus be blocked?

A

midpoint of the posterior border of the sternocleidomastoid

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14
Q

Where can a deep cervical plexus block be performed?

A

transverse processes of C2-C4

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15
Q

What are the indications for cervical plexus block?

A

carotid endarterectomy

superficial neck surgery

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16
Q

Where is the celiac plexus located?

17
Q

What sensory information is transmitted through the celiac plexus?

A

visceral pain from the mid-stomach to the mid-transverse colon

18
Q

What are the most common side effects of a celiac plexus block?

A
  1. orthostatic hypotension (splanchnic vasodilatation)
  2. diarrhea (splanchnic vasodilatation)
  3. paraplegia (injury to the artery of Adamkiewicz)
19
Q

How does epidural anesthesia affect bowel function?

A

increases gut motility and decreases the chance of ileus

20
Q

How is a subdural block differentiated from a subarachnoid block?

A
  • slower onset
  • extensive sensory block with minimal motor block
  • less hypotension (but more than epidural)
21
Q

What indicates complete resolution of a spinal block?

A

ability to urinate

22
Q

Which fascial planes are traversed during a femoral nerve block?

A

fascia lata then fascia iliaca

23
Q

What factors determine degree of hypothermia during spinal anesthesia?

A
  • height of block
  • patient age
24
Q

What are the indications for a sphenopalatine ganglion block?

A

analgesia following endoscopic sinus surgery

25
What is the dermatome map?
26
When can prophylactic Lovenox be resumed after removal of an epidural catheter?
4 hours after
27
What is the upper limit of PTT to administer neuraxial anesthesia according to ASRA guidelines?
1.5 x normal (40)
28
How long should Plavix, dabigatran, Eliquis, Xarelto, and eptipibatide be held prior to neuraxial anesthesia?
Plavix: 5 days Eliquis and Xarelto: 3-5 day dabigatran: 3 days eptifibatide: 8 hours
29
How high will a neuraxial block typically rise with hyperbaric local ansethetic in a supine patient?
about T6 (due to normal kyphosis of the thoracic spine)
30
Which patient factors are assoiated with high spinal block due to decreased CSF volume?
pregnancy ascites severe kyphoscoliosis advanced age
31
When are the two peaks of respiratory depression following intrathecal morphine administration? Peak analgesia?
peak respiratory depression: after injection and 6 hours later peak analgesia: 6-12 hours after injection
32
Is pruritis worse with neuraxial or IV opioid administration?
neuraxial administration
33
Which epidural local anesthetic may (unlikely) interfere with the efficacy of epidural opioids?
chloroprocaine
34
What areas are most commonly spared by an interscalene block?
ulnar nerve (C8-T1) proximal cutaneous shoulder (covered by superficial cervical plexus block)
35
Which left sided upper extremity block has the highest risk of chylothorax?
infraclavicular
36
Which nerves mediate wrist extension? Flexion? Pinch?
Extension: raidal Flexion: median Pinch: ulnar
37
What are the max doses of commonly used local anesthetics for regional anesthesia?
bupivacaine: 2.5 mg/kg (3 mg/kg w/ epi) ropivacaine: 2-3 mg/kg mepivacaine: 5 mg/kg (7 mg/kg w/ epi) lidocaine: 4.5 mg/kg (7 mg/kg w/ epi)
38
Branches of which nerve predominantly carry sensation to the plantar surface of the foot? Dorsal surface?
plantar surface: tibial nerve dorsal surface: common peroneal nerve
39
What innervates the web space between the great and second toes?
deep peroneal nerve