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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2004
Comparative Study Clinical TrialThigh rotation and the anterior approach to the sciatic nerve: a magnetic resonance imaging study.
- Colin Scott Moore, Declan Sheppard, and John Anthony W Wildsmith.
- University Department of Anesthesia, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, UK. csmoore@doctors.org.uk
- Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2004 Jan 1; 29 (1): 32-5.
Background And ObjectivesThe anterior approach to the sciatic nerve block may be associated with a high failure rate because the nerve lies posterior to the lesser trochanter of the femur at the level of needle insertion. However, previous work using cadavers demonstrated that internal rotation of the leg renders the nerve more accessible to the anterior approach.MethodsTen volunteers consented to undergo magnetic resonance imaging. Markers were placed on the surface where a needle would have been inserted for an anterior approach to the sciatic nerve. Three scans were then performed: the first with both legs in the neutral position, the second with maximal bilateral internal rotation at the hip, and the third with maximal bilateral external rotation at the hip.ResultsExamination of the scans by a consultant radiologist showed that, as the thigh is rotated, the number of scans showing an unobstructed needle passage from the skin marker to the sciatic nerve rate increased from 5% in external rotation to 85% in internal rotation. The number of times the needle path passed through femoral neurovascular bundle also fell from 55% in external rotation to 15% in internal rotation.ConclusionsThe results confirm that, as the thigh is moved from an externally to an internally rotated position, the sciatic nerve becomes more accessible by the anterior approach at the level of the lesser trochanter, and the risk of femoral artery or nerve puncture is reduced but not eliminated.
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