The Yale journal of biology and medicine
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Clinical Trial
Intravenous regional anesthesia with ketorolac-lidocaine for the management of sympathetically-mediated pain.
This retrospective study was undertaken to determine the usefulness of intravenous regional anesthetic (IVRA) blocks containing ketorolac and lidocaine in the management of sympathetically-mediated pain, and to determine what factors, if any, predicted success with this technique. Sixty-one patients with reflex sympathetic dystrophy presenting to a university-affiliated teaching hospital's pain management center were evaluated. Patients underwent one or more treatments with IVRA blocks containing ketorolac and lidocaine. ⋯ The only symptom which predicted a failure with this therapy was allodynia. No patient had serious side effects from the IVRA block; dizziness following tourniquet release occurred in 41 percent (n = 25) of the patients. IVRA block containing ketorolac is a useful and minimally invasive technique for the management of patients with reflex sympathetic dystrophy.