A Surgeon's View: Dispelling Some Common PNB Myths

I'VE BEEN A HUGE FAN OF peripheral nerve blocks since the early 1990s, and today I offer a block to every one of my shoulder surgery patients. However, many of my colleagues in orthopedic surgery are not as enthusiastic. The reason, I think, is that they still subscribe to myths about PNBs that can prevent them from realizing their great advantages for patients and institutions alike. Here's a look at some of the most common myths and why they should no longer hold surgeons back.

Myth 1: PNBs prolong turnover time. PNBs do require some scheduling adjustments, but once you make them, PNBs actually reduce turnover time significantly. The key is to have the anesthesia team begin blocking the next patient outside the OR while the surgeon finishes the current case. That way, the patient is ready as soon as the surgeon is. Once this process is in place, cases with peripheral nerve blocks turn over quickly. Once the shoulder patient is in the OR, positioning is also much quicker. Since these patients don't need general anesthesia, we don't have to fuss with head control issues, and we don't need to intubate. And because the patient remains hemodynamically unaffected, we don't have to wait for emergence from general anesthesia after the procedure is over.

Myth 2: Lower extremity PNBs prevent safe ambulation. Skilled professionals can administer blocks that provide pain control while still allowing safe ambulation. It's important to distinguish between surgical pain control and post-op pain control. A short-acting anesthetic with a relatively high concentration during surgery can provide "solid" pain relief. After surgery, a longer acting anesthetic with a low concentration can continue pain relief while having less impact on motor function. Modern pumps can vary flow rates through continuous nerve-block catheters to provide even more flexibility.

Myth 3: Local anesthetic infusion is as effective as a PNB for pain control. It's true that some commercially sponsored studies comparing blocks with local infusion suggest that the two provide equivalent pain control. However, the independent studies indicate that PNBs are much more effective. For my patients, PNBs clearly provide better pain control. In my view, PNBs make a lot more theoretical sense because they stop the transmission of the pain signal and prevent the pain cascade from getting started, whereas a local infusion only ameliorates the response after the fact. Recent evidence also suggests that intra-articular infusions can cause chondrolysis in the shoulder.

Myths are powerful, persistent and persuasive, but we need to be guided by the truth. The truth about PNBs is that they prevent pain and PONV much more successfully than any other tool in our arsenal, and they're an invaluable component of a good multimodal pain control regimen. Discuss them with your anesthesia team and your patients.

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Part 41: A Surgeon's View: Dispelling Some Common PNB Myths
Part 40: A Surgeon's Perspective: The Power of PNBs
Part 39: Acute Pain Nurse: Key to Continuous Infusion Success
Part 38: A Breakthrough in Nerve Stimulation
Part 37: No Pain, Big Gain
Part 36: Our Insurers Pay for Peripheral Nerve Blocks
Part 35: Fortifying Our Future With PNB Training
Part 34: Stimulating Catheters for Outpatient Surgery
Part 33: When Should We Use Stimulating Catheters?
Part 32: What Is Ultrasound's Role in Peripheral Nerve Blocks?
Part 31: There's No Better Advertisement than a Happy Patient!
Part 30: Avoiding Post-Lithotripsy Pain
Part 29: Regional Anesthesia Took My Pain From 10 to 0
Part 28: How to Make Peripheral Nerve Blocks Even Safer
Part 27: Helping Patients Understand Regional Blocks
Part 26: Ultrasound and Nerve Stimulation: Perfect Together
Part 25: The Post-Opioid Era
Part 24: Practical Pain Control
Part 23: In Our PACU, Blocks Made Miles of Difference
Part 22: Filling the Analgesic Gap
Part 21: Is Regional Anesthesia More Cost-Efficient?
Part 20: Prime Patients Early for PNB Success
Part 19: With Nerve Blocks, Time is Safety
Part 18: Nerve Blocks Improve Patient Well-Being
Part 17: The PNBs Have It
Part 16: Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks: The Jury Is In
Part 15: Is Regional Anesthesia More Cost-Efficient?
Part 14: Block On!
Part 13: Regional Anesthesia: Lessons from Iraq
Part 12: Help is On the Way
Part 11: The Promise of Pediatric Peripheral Nerve Blocks
Part 10: Building a Better Regional Anesthesia Procedure Note
Part 9: Perception is Everything
Part 8: Peripheral Nerve Stimulators Improve Patient Comfort
Part 7: Regional Anesthesia Helps Elderly Patients Stay Alert and On Track
Part 6: 4 Ways to Make Continuous Infusions Run More Smoothly
Part 5: Tips for Managing Orthopedic Regional Anesthesia Patients
Part 4: How to Bill for Regional Anesthesia
Part 3: How to Ease Into Regional Blocks
Part 2: 3 Things to Know About Regional Anesthesia Programs
Part 1: The Case for Regional Anesthesia