Stimulating Catheters for Outpatient Surgery
Brian Williamson, Pittsburgh, PA

WHEN ACL PATIENTS RECEIVE a well-placed continuous femoral nerve block, more than three-quarters of them will remain virtually pain-free for the first post-op week[1]. They will experience very little "rebound" pain - the type that occurs after a single-shot block wears off2. Moreover, according to a 233-patient study we performed[1], they will achieve at least a one-point reduction in pain scores for every 33 hours of continuous nerve block they receive[2], depending on other pain relievers the patient is taking.

The operative phrase here, though, is well-placed. With some blocks - including interscalene, axillary and sciatic nerve blocks - placing a catheter in exactly the right spot can be challenging. It is all too easy to thread the catheter too far through the needle, causing the tip of the catheter to veer away from its target, thus directing the local anesthetic away from the target nerve.

For this reason, we use stimulating catheters when we want to achieve a continuous nerve block for a patient who is going home. Here's how. First, we use a needle with a stimulator to locate the target plexus. Then we slide the stimulating catheter through the needle, and disconnect the lead from the needle and attach it to the catheter. Just as a stimulating needle indicates when the needle is close to the target nerve by eliciting a twitch response, the stimulating catheter tells us when the catheter tip is close enough to the target nerve by eliciting the same response.

In our practice, we can place a stimulating catheter as quickly as a nonstimulating one by using a lower threshold for the twitch response. Our catheters are consistently successful when we use a threshold of 1.0 mA to even 2.0 mA, as opposed to the typical 0.5 mA that we use for singleshot blocks. Some authors have used ultrasound[3] with or without nerve stimulation to verify both needle placement (visible with ultrasound) and catheter placement (halo of local anesthetic around visible nerve when catheter is properly located and injected).

Once the catheter is properly placed, we secure it with tape or glue, and use it for both post-op analgesia and to reduce anesthesia requirements during surgery.

It also pays to remember that pain control starts with blocking the appropriate nerves. Total knee replacement (TKR) pain, for example, is mediated (mostly) by both the sciatic and femoral nerves, and research suggests that coadministration of sciatic and femoral nerve block catheters helps reduce post-op pain scores, opioid requirements, and PONV.

With the tools we now have at hand, the time has come to set our standards high for post-op pain control. No more than 25 percent of patients should ever reach moderate-to-severe pain during the first week after significant elective knee surgery such as ACL, and less than 10 percent should experience PONV[1]. With a well-placed continuous block, we can achieve this benchmark - and confidently send patients home knowing their pain scores will stay low.

1. Williams et al., Anesthesiology 104: 315-327, 2006.
2. Williams et al., Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 32: 186-192, 2007.
3. Swenson et al., Anesthesia & Analgesia 103: 1436-43, 2006.

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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