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A novel Ocular Anaesthetic Scoring System, OASS, tool to measure both motor and sensory function following local anaesthesia

Authors :
Sidath E. Liyanage
Mark Muldoon
Trevor King
Jasmina Cehajic-Kapetanovic
Paul N. Bishop
Ian M. Wearne
Source :
British Journal of Ophthalmology. 94:28-32
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
BMJ, 2009.

Abstract

Background/aims: To devise and evaluate a novel Ocular Anaesthetic Scoring System (OASS) for nontopical local anaesthesia. Methods: In OASS, a score of between 0 (poor) and 14 (excellent) was devised measuring motor (ocular motility, levator and orbicularis function) and sensory functions (digital spear pressure at limbus and topical anaesthetic sting). 40 patients were studied prospectively to analyse interobserver consistency in OASS. A further 100 patients were collected into four groups receiving either sub-Tenon or peribulbar block with 150 or 300 units of hyaluronidase. Patient satisfaction was determined using the Visual Analogue Pain Scale and Iowa Satisfaction with Anaesthesia Scale. Results: There was no significant difference in OASS scores between two independent observers (p = 0.8910). The sub-Tenon approach achieved significantly better OASS scores than the peribulbar approach (p,0.0004). 300 units of hyaluronidase gave significantly higher OASS scores in both sub-Tenon (p,0.0001) and peribulbar groups (p,0.0001). Spearman rank correlation showed that OASS correlates significantly with VAPS (20.82, p,0.0001) and ISAS (0.70, p,0.0001). The median satisfaction score was significant in order of magnitude: sub-Tenon with 300 units of hyaluronidase. sub-Tenon with 150 units of hyaluronidase.peribulbar with 300 units of hyaluronidase.peribulbar with 150 units of hyaluronidase. Conclusion: OASS is a simple and robust system for assessing and comparing non-topical local anaesthetic techniques. Of the techniques evaluated, a sub-Tenon block with 300 units of hyaluronidase gives the best anaesthesia, analgesia and patient satisfaction results. Non-topical local anaesthesia is used for many ocular procedures and has a major role in cataract surgery. In the last decade the use of local anaesthesia has increased from 20% in 1991 1 to

Details

ISSN :
00071161
Volume :
94
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Ophthalmology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6399b47281327ae7e804268b7f6fdc9f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.2008.155572