©2024 Stanford Medicine
Optimizing Catheter Insertion Technique for Ultrasound-guided Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks
Not Recruiting
Trial ID: NCT01459523
Purpose
Continuous peripheral nerve blocks (CPNB; also known as "perineural" catheters) provide target-specific pain control for a variety of surgeries. There has been increasing interest in the use of ultrasound guidance for regional anesthesia, and many techniques using ultrasound alone for perineural catheter insertion have been described. Catheters may be placed at various points along the brachial plexus (for upper extremity procedures) or in proximity to the femoral and/or sciatic nerve (for lower extremity procedures). To date, the optimal ultrasound scanning technique, catheter insertion endpoint, catheter placement location per indication, for the majority of ultrasound-guided continuous peripheral nerve blocks remain unknown. This study will help provide important information related to optimal ultrasound scanning techniques and will help identify ways to improve the success rates, onset times, and analgesic effectiveness of these techniques for real patients undergoing surgical procedures.
Official Title
Optimizing Catheter Insertion Technique for Ultrasound-guided Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks
Stanford Investigator(s)
Edward R. Mariano, MD, MAS, FASA, FASRA
Professor of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine (MSD)
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria:
* At least 18 years of age;
* Undergoing unilateral, upper (at or distal to the elbow) or lower (hip or distal) extremity orthopedic surgery, with moderate-to-severe postoperative pain expected; and
* Desiring a continuous perineural catheter for postoperative analgesia.
Exclusion criteria:
* Patients who will have difficulty understanding the study protocol or caring for the infusion pump/catheter system; or
* Patients with any known contraindication to study medications, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, neuropathy of any etiology in the affected extremity;
* Patients with a contraindication to regional blockade (eg, clotting deficiency);
* Patients with any known acute or chronic hepatic or renal insufficiency or failure;
* Patients with any additional surgical site outside of the catheter-affected area (eg, iliac crest bone graft in addition to hand surgery);
* Patients with chronic opioid use (defined as daily use for more than 4 weeks prior to surgery) or active illicit substance abuse;
* Patient weighing \< 40 kg;
* Pregnancy;
* Incarceration; or
* Inability to communicate with the investigators and hospital staff.
Intervention(s):
procedure: Proximal placement
procedure: Short axis ultrasound
procedure: Long axis
procedure: Distal placement
Not Recruiting
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
Edward R. Mariano, MD, MAS (Clinical Research)
650-493-5000