Title: LOCAL ANESTHETICS AND REGIONAL ANESTHESIA
1LOCAL ANESTHETICS AND REGIONAL ANESTHESIA
2Local Anesthetics- History
- 1860 - cocaine isolated from erythroxylum coca
- Koller - 1884 uses cocaine for topical anesthesia
- Halsted - 1885 performs peripheral nerve block
with local - Bier - 1899 first spinal anesthetic
3Local Anesthetics - Definition
- A substance which reversibly inhibits nerve
conduction when applied directly to tissues at
non-toxic concentrations
4Local anesthetics - Mechanism
- Limit influx of sodium, thereby limiting
propagation of the action potential.
5Local Anesthetics - Classes
Esters
6Local anesthetics - Classes (Rule of is)
- Esters
- Cocaine
- Chloroprocaine
- Procaine
- Tetracaine
Amides Bupivacaine Lidocaine Ropivacaine Etidoca
ine Mepivacaine
7Local anesthetics - Formulation
- Biologically active substances are frequently
administered as very dilute solutions which can
be expressed as parts of active drug per 100
parts of solution (grams percent) - Ex. 2 solution
-
- _2 grams__ _2000 mg_ __20 mg__
- 100 ccs 100 ccs 1
cc
8Local Anesthetics - Allergy
- True allergy is very rare
- Most reactions are from ester class - ester
hydrolysis (normal metabolism) leads to formation
of PABA - like compounds - Patient reports of allergy are frequently due
to previous intravascular injections
9Local Anesthetics - Toxicity
- Tissue toxicity - Rare
- Can occur if administered in high enough
concentrations (greater than those used
clinically) - Usually related to preservatives added to solution
- Systemic toxicity - Rare
- Related to blood level of drug secondary to
absorption from site of injection. - Range from lightheadedness, tinnitus to seizures
and CNS/cardiovascular collapse
10Local anesthetics - Duration
- Determined by rate of elimination of agent from
site injected - Factors include lipid solubility, dose given,
blood flow at site, addition of vasoconstrictors
(does not reliably prolong all agents) - Some techniques allow multiple injections over
time to increase duration, e.g. epidural catheter
11Vasoconstrictors
12Local anesthetics - vasoconstrictors
Ratios Epinephrine is added to local anesthetics
in extremely dilute concentrations, best
expressed as a ratio of grams of drugtotal ccs
of solution. Expressed numerically, a 11000
preparation of epinephrine would be
13Local anesthetics - vasoconstrictors
Therefore, a 1 200,000 solution of epinephrine
would be
or
5 mcg epi 1 cc solution
14Local anesthetics - vasoconstrictors
- Vasoconstrictors should not be used in the
following locations - Fingers
- Toes
- Nose
- Ear lobes
- Penis
15REGIONAL ANESTHESIA
16Regional anesthesia - Definition
- Rendering a specific area of the body, e.g. foot,
arm, lower extremities, insensate to stimulus of
surgery or other instrumentation
17Regional anesthesia - Uses
- Provide anesthesia for a surgical procedure
- Provide analgesia post-operatively or during
labor and delivery - Diagnosis or therapy for patients with chronic
pain syndromes
18Regional anesthesia - types
- Topical
- Local/Field
- Intravenous block (Bier block)
- Peripheral (named) nerve, e.g. radial n.
- Plexus - brachial, lumbar
- Central neuraxial - epidural, spinal
19Topical Anesthesia
- Application of local anesthetic to mucous
membrane - cornea, nasal/oral mucosa - Uses
- awake oral, nasal intubation, superficial
surgical procedure - Advantages
- technically easy
- minimal equipment
- Disadvantages
- potential for large doses leading to toxicity
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22Local/Field Anesthesia
- Application of local subcutaneously to
anesthetize distal nerve endings - Uses
- Suturing, minor superficial surgery, line
placement, more extensive surgery with sedation - Advantages
- minimal equipment, technically easy, rapid onset
- Disadvantages
- potential for toxicity if large field
23IV Block - Bier block
- Injection of local anesthetic intravenously for
anesthesia of an extremity - Uses
- any surgical procedure on an extremity
- Advantages
- technically simple, minimal equipment, rapid
onset - Disadvantages
- duration limited by tolerance of tourniquet
pain, toxicity
24(No Transcript)
25Peripheral nerve block
- Injecting local anesthetic near the course of a
named nerve - Uses
- Surgical procedures in the distribution of the
blocked nerve - Advantages
- relatively small dose of local anesthetic to
cover large area rapid onset - Disadvantages
- technical complexity, neuropathy
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28Plexus Blockade
- Injection of local anesthetic adjacent to a
plexus, e.g cervical, brachial or lumbar plexus - Uses
- surgical anesthesia or post-operative analgesia
in the distribution of the plexus - Advantages
- large area of anesthesia with relatively large
dose of agent - Disadvantages
- technically complex, potential for toxicity and
neuropathy.
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31Central neuraxial blockade - Spinal
- Injection of local anesthetic into CSF
- Uses
- profound anesthesia of lower abdomen and
extremities - Advantages
- technically easy (LP technique), high success
rate, rapid onset - Disadvantages
- high spinal, hypotension due to sympathetic
block, post dural puncture headache.
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34Central Neuraxial Blockade - epidural
- Injection of local anesthetic in to the epidural
space at any level of the spinal column - Uses
- Anesthesia/analgesia of the thorax, abdomen,
lower extremities - Advantages
- Controlled onset of blockade, long duration when
catheter is placed, post-operative analgesia. - Disadvantages
- Technically complex, toxicity, spinal headache
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41QUESTIONS?