A&A practice
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Efficient pain management is essential for postoperative rehabilitation in patients undergoing a tumor resection with an immediate reconstructive surgery. Ultrasound-guided quadratus lumborum block has been described for abdominal or hip surgery, but not for concomitant surgery in the abdomen and the thigh. The paraspinous transmuscular approach has easy landmarks to perform this block. We present a case of a patient undergoing a resection of a sarcoma in the lower limb with an immediate reconstruction with a pedicled vertical designed deep inferior epigastric perforator flap, in whom a successful paraspinous transmuscular quadratus lumborum block for postoperative analgesia was performed.
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Pain following amputation is often poorly controlled despite the use of nerve blocks. We describe a novel pain management approach in a 56-year-old woman with episodes of poorly controlled pain following below-knee amputation despite a multimodal analgesic regimen with continuous sciatic nerve block. Effective analgesia was observed during those episodes when the nerve block catheter was briefly stimulated at low frequency using a nerve stimulator designed for regional anesthesia procedural guidance. This case report explains the utilization and rationale of this hybrid technique of combined peripheral nerve stimulation and locoregional analgesia via perineural nerve block catheters to augment analgesia.
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Kearns Sayre syndrome (KSS) is a rare mitochondrial myopathy that is associated with progressive impaired ventilatory drive, heart block, and peripheral neuropathy. Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is a rare chronic motor and sensory peripheral neuropathy which includes muscle weakness and restrictive pulmonary impairment. ⋯ We report a 52-year-old man diagnosed with variants of KSS and CMT presenting for supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) ablation. This is the first report of successful perioperative management of a general anesthetic in a patient with both KSS and CMT.
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A tourniquet is used during surgery to produce a bloodless surgical field and decrease intraoperative blood loss. Although useful, tourniquets are associated with various physiological alterations both during inflation and deflation phases which may be poorly tolerated in compromised patients. We report a case of transient neurological dysfunction and intracranial hypertension after tourniquet deflation in a 15-year-old patient with a head injury. Intracranial hypertension under general anesthesia was diagnosed based on bradyarrhythmia and elevated ultrasonographic optic nerve sheath diameter as compared to preoperative values.
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An intrathecal drug delivery system (IDDS) has been widely utilized in the management of chronic pain and spasticity when oral pharmacologic agents are deemed ineffective. Typically, intrathecal pumps are implanted in the abdominal region; however, previous case reports have described nontraditional pump implantation sites, such as anterior thigh, gluteal region, and iliac fossa. Adding to the growing literature of alternative implantation sites, this case report discusses the implantation of the pump into the submuscular plane of the pectoralis major muscle and reviews the advantages and disadvantages of this location.