• Arthroscopy · Jan 2021

    Editorial Comment

    Editorial Commentary: Neuraxial Anesthesia Improves Pain After Hip Arthroscopy but Risks Ambulatory Discharge Delay.

    • Edward N Yap and Matthias Behrends.
    • University of California, San Francisco.
    • Arthroscopy. 2021 Jan 1; 37 (1): 147-148.

    AbstractHip arthroscopy continues to be one of the fastest-growing orthopaedic procedures nationally, and pain control following these procedures can be challenging. As regional anesthesia techniques for this population have shown to have limited benefits, pain management for hip arthroscopy focused on multimodal analgesia and preventive analgesia, interventions that reduce postoperative hyperalgesia. The use of neuraxial anesthesia such as spinal and epidural anesthesia, established preventive analgesic anesthetic techniques, has demonstrated to improve postoperative pain in orthopaedic surgery when compared with general anesthesia. This promising finding highlights that despite potential disadvantages of neuraxial anesthesia, such as a small risk for complications or delayed resolution of the neuraxial block that could delay discharge, neuraxial anesthesia could be a suitable anesthetic technique for ambulatory orthopaedic surgery.Copyright © 2020 Arthroscopy Association of North America. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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