Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks: The Jury Is In
For treating post-op pain, opioids pale in comparison to continuous peripheral nerve blocks (PNBs). Continuous peripheral nerve blocks offer superior pain control, fewer side effects and better patient satisfaction, and they offer certain cost savings in treating opioid related side effects, according to our recent meta-analysis of 19 controlled studies and 603 patients.

Our analysis shows that continuous peripheral nerve blocks consistently helped reduce pain through all three post-operative infusion days. Mean Visual Analog Scale scores were approximately 50 percent lower in peripheral nerve block patients than in opioid-treated patients, and the highest recorded VAS scores at 24 hours post-op were substantially lower in PNB patients than in opioid-treated patients.

All continuous peripheral nerve blocks provided superior pain control to opioids regardless of location and frequency. However, all PNBs are not created equal. Our analysis suggests that continuous PNBs are significantly more effective than intermittently-bolused PNBs. It also suggests that continuous PNBs that provide nearly full analgesic coverage of all affected nerves—such as brachial plexus PNBs, which block all nerves to the arm—are more effective than those that do not—like femoral blocks, which may cover just 70 to 80 percent of affected nerves for certain surgeries.

Since PNB patients took fewer opioids in our analysis, they also had fewer opioid-related side effects—including nausea/vomiting, sedation and pruritus—and this helped reduce the cost of care. We estimate that continuous PNBs saved approximately $10.12 per patient because patients needed fewer interventions for treating nausea/vomiting. The most common PNB-related complication was motor block, which occurred in 31.4 percent of patients.

All told, these benefits translate into happier patients. Studies suggest that continuous PNB patients have higher satisfaction levels, better sleep patterns, improved rehab and shorter hospital stays. And while we need more research to confirm these findings and determine the ideal dosing regimens and durations for each block and procedure, I think it's safe to say the jury is “in” when it comes to treating post-op pain. Continuous PNBs offer superior pain control, produce fewer side effects, may have significant cost savings, and make patients happier than opioid-based regimens.

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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
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