1. Motor-sparing nerve blocks for total knee replacement: A scoping review
- Author
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Daniela Bravo, Francis V. Salinas, Julián Aliste, De Q.H. Tran, Sebastián Layera, and Mohammed Saadawi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,Analgesic ,Total knee replacement ,Placebo ,law.invention ,Patient satisfaction ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Anesthetics, Local ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee ,Pain, Postoperative ,business.industry ,Nerve Block ,Popliteal artery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Femoral triangle ,Anesthesia ,Nerve block ,Analgesia ,business ,Femoral Nerve - Abstract
Study objective This scoping review investigates the optimal combination of motor-sparing analgesic interventions for patients undergoing total knee replacement (TKR). Design Scoping review. Intervention MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL databases were searched (inception-last week of May 2020). Only trials including motor-sparing interventions were included. Randomized controlled trials lacking prospective registration and blinded assessment were excluded. Main results The cumulative evidence suggests that femoral triangle blocks outperform placebo and periarticular infiltration. When combined with the latter, femoral triangle blocks are associated with improved pain control, higher patient satisfaction and decreased opioid consumption. Continuous femoral triangle blocks provide superior postoperative analgesia compared with their single-injection counterparts. However, these benefits seem less pronounced when perineural adjuvants are used. Combined femoral triangle-obturator blocks result in improved analgesia and swifter discharge compared with femoral triangle blocks alone. Conclusions The optimal analgesic strategy for TKR may include a combination of different analgesic modalities (periarticular infiltration, femoral triangle blocks, obturator nerve block). Future trials are required to investigate the incremental benefits provided by local anesthetic infiltration between the popliteal artery and the capsule of the knee (IPACK), popliteal plexus block and genicular nerve block.
- Published
- 2020