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Regional anaesthesia for outpatient knee arthroscopy: a randomized clinical comparison of two different anaesthetic techniques

Authors :
Andrea Casati
Giorgio Torri
Marco Berti
Beatrice Borghi
Gianluca Cappelleri
Guido Fanelli
D. Anelati
Source :
Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. 44:543-547
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Wiley, 2000.

Abstract

BACKGROUND The purpose of this prospective, randomized study was to evaluate the time required to perform anaesthesia, achieve surgical block and fulfil standardized discharge criteria in outpatients receiving knee arthroscopy with either spinal anaesthesia or combined sciatic-femoral nerve block. METHODS After a standard midazolam/ketoprofen premedication and baseline measurement of cardiovascular parameters, 50 ASA I-II patients scheduled for elective outpatient knee arthroscopy were randomized to receive spinal anaesthesia with 8 mg of 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine (group Spinal, n=25), or combined sciatic-femoral nerve block with 25 ml of mepivacaine 20 mg ml(-1) and a multiple injection technique (15 ml for femoral nerve block and 10 ml for sciatic nerve block). Times lasting from skin disinfection to the end of local anaesthetic injection (preparation time) and then to achieve surgical anaesthesia (readiness for surgery), as well as times required for block resolution, micturition, unassisted ambulation, and home discharge were recorded by a blinded observer. Occurrence of adverse events was also recorded. RESULTS Preparation time (mean+/-SD) was longer with sciatic-femoral block (8+/-2.7 min) than spinal anaesthesia (5+/-2.1 min) (P=0.0002) while no differences were observed in the time required to achieve readiness for surgery (14+/-5 min and 15+/-6 min in the Spinal and Sciatic-femoral groups, respectively). No differences in haemodynamic side effects and need for intraoperative additional analgesia were observed. Patients receiving spinal anaesthesia showed a faster resolution of nerve block and longer time to micturition (137+/-49 min and 231+/-101 min) than patients receiving peripheral nerve blockade (206+/-51 min and 145+/-36 min) (P

Details

ISSN :
00015172
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0333460a3e709f9d31a9ec251ce4a06f