• J Med Case Rep · Oct 2011

    Phrenic nerve block with ultrasound-guidance for treatment of hiccups: a case report.

    • Kristiina Kuusniemi and Ville Pyylampi.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency Care and Pain Medicine, Turku University Hospital, Luolavuorentie 2, Turku 20700, FI-20520, Finland. kristiina.kuusniemi@tyks.fi.
    • J Med Case Rep. 2011 Oct 3; 5: 493.

    IntroductionPersistent hiccups can be more than a simple and short-lived nuisance and therefore sometimes call for serious consideration. Hiccupping episodes that last only a few minutes may be annoying, but persistent hiccups may initiate many major complications.Case PresentationA 72-year-old Caucasian man with spinal stenosis presented for L4-5 laminectomy under spinal anesthesia. The surgery and anesthesia, as well as the perioperative period, passed without any incident, except for persistent postoperative hiccups not responding to conservative and pharmacological treatment. Hiccups resulted in a prolonged hospital stay as they lasted until the seventh postoperative day. On that day, a right-sided ultrasound-guided phrenic nerve block with 5 ml of bupivacaine 5 mg/ml with epinephrine was performed successfully with a single-injection technique. Ten minutes after the procedure the hiccups vanished and a partial sensomotoric block of his right shoulder developed. No adverse effect occurred; our patient could be discharged on the same day and the hiccups did not return.ConclusionUltrasound provides us with non-invasive information regarding anatomy and allows anesthesiologists to visualize needle insertion, to identify the exact location of the injected solution and to avoid such structures as arteries or veins. As such, this method should be actively utilized. In cases where both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments prove to be ineffective when treating persistent hiccups, a single-shot ultrasound-guided technique should be considered before the patient becomes exhausted.

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