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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2006
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyContinuous positive airway pressure breathing increases the spread of sensory blockade after low-thoracic epidural injection of lidocaine.
- W Anton Visser, Mathieu J M Gielen, and Janneke L P Giele.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Management, Amphia Hospital, Breda, The Netherlands. avisser@amphia.nl
- Anesth. Analg. 2006 Jan 1;102(1):268-71.
AbstractFactors affecting the distribution of sensory blockade after epidural injection of local anesthetics remain incompletely clarified. To evaluate if increasing intrathoracic pressure affects the spread of thoracic epidural anesthesia, we randomized 20 patients who received an epidural catheter at the T7-8 or T8-9 intervertebral space into 2 groups. The control group (n = 10) received an epidural test dose of 4 mL lidocaine 2% during spontaneous breathing at ambient pressure. The continuous positive airway pressure (n = 10) group received the same epidural test dose but during spontaneous respiration with 7.5 cm H2O continuous positive airway pressure. The groups were comparable with respect to demographic variables. Fifteen minutes after the conclusion of the epidural injection, the sensory block ranged from from T4 [median, interquartile range 2.75 segments] to T11 (interquartile range 3.5 segments) in the control group and from T5 (interquartile range 2.25 segments) to L2 (IQR 2.25 segments) in the continuous positive airway pressure group (P = 0.005 for the caudal border). The total number of segments blocked was 7 (median, interquartile range 2.25) in the control group and 11 (interquartile range 3.5) in the continuous positive airway pressure group (P = 0.004). The number of segments blocked caudad to the injection site was 3 (median, interquartile range 3.5) in the control group and 6 (interquartile range 2.25) in the continuous positive airway pressure group (P = 0.005). We conclude that continuous positive airway pressure increases the spread of sensory blockade in thoracic epidural anesthesia, primarily by a more caudad extension of sensory blockade.
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