Novel Regional Nerve Blocks in Clinical Practice: Evolving Techniques for Pain Management.
Amber N EdinoffBrook GirmaKatherine A TrettinCassidy C HortonAaron J KayeElyse M CornettFarnad ImaniEhsan BastanhaghAdam M KayeAlan David KayePublished in: Anesthesiology and pain medicine (2021)
This review examines the use of novel US-guided nerve blocks in clinical practice. Erector spinae block is a regional anesthesia technique doing by injecting a local anesthetic among the erector spinae muscle group and transverse processes. The phrenic nerve is a branch of the cervical plexus, arising from the anterior rami of cervical nerves C3, C4, and C5. The quadratus lumborum muscle is located along the posterior abdominal wall. It originates from the transverse process of the L5 vertebral body, the iliolumbar ligament, and the iliac crest. US-guided peripheral nerve procedures have a considerable scope of use, including treating headaches and hiccups to abdominal surgical pain, cesarean sections, musculoskeletal pathologies. These nerve blocks have been an effective addition to clinical anesthesia practice. The use of peripheral nerve blocks has improved postoperative pain, lessened the use of opioids and their potential side effects, and decreased the incidence of sleep disturbance in patients. More research should be done to further delineate the potential benefits of these blocks.
Keyphrases
- peripheral nerve
- pain management
- ultrasound guided
- chronic pain
- clinical practice
- postoperative pain
- end stage renal disease
- skeletal muscle
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- primary care
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- risk factors
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- body composition
- postmenopausal women
- endovascular treatment