• Pain Med · Jul 2018

    A Retrospective Study Evaluating the Effect of Low Doses of Perineural Dexamethasone on Ropivacaine Brachial Plexus Peripheral Nerve Block Analgesic Duration.

    • Gregory D Schnepper, Benjamin I Kightlinger, Yunyun Jiang, Bethany J Wolf, Eric D Bolin, and Sylvia H Wilson.
    • Departments of Anesthesia and Perioperative Medicine.
    • Pain Med. 2018 Jul 1; 19 (7): 1485-1493.

    ObjectiveExamination of the effectiveness of perineural dexamethasone administered in very low and low doses on ropivacaine brachial plexus block duration.DesignRetrospective evaluation of brachial plexus block duration in a large cohort of patients receiving peripheral nerve blocks with and without perineural dexamethasone in a prospectively collected quality assurance database.SettingA single academic medical center.MethodsA total of 1,942 brachial plexus blocks placed over a 16-month period were reviewed. Demographics, nerve block location, and perineural dexamethasone utilization and dose were examined in relation to block duration. Perineural dexamethasone was examined as none (0 mg), very low dose (2 mg or less), and low dose (greater than 2 mg to 4 mg). Continuous catheter techniques, local anesthetics other than ropivacaine, and block locations with fewer than 15 subjects were excluded. Associations between block duration and predictors of interest were examined using multivariable regression models. A subgroup analysis of the impact of receiving dexamethasone on block duration within each block type was also conducted using a univariate linear regression approach.ResultsA total of 1,027 subjects were evaluated. More than 90% of brachial plexus blocks contained perineural dexamethasone (≤4 mg), with a median dose of 2 mg. Increased block duration was associated with receiving any dose of perineural dexamethasone (P < 0.0001), female gender (P = 0.022), increased age (P = 0.048), and increased local anesthetic dose (P = 0.01). In a multivariable model, block duration did not differ with very low- or low-dose perineural dexamethasone after controlling for other factors (P = 0.420).ConclusionPerineural dexamethasone prolonged block duration compared with ropivacaine alone; however, duration was not greater with low-dose compared with very low-dose perineural dexamethasone.

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