Anaesthesia for open wrist fracture surgery in adults/elderly.
Irene SellbrandtMetha BrattwallMargareta Warrén StombergPether JildenstålJan G JakobssonPublished in: F1000Research (2017)
Anaesthetic technique for open surgery of acute distal for arm fracture in adults/elderly is not well defined. Regional anaesthesia, general anaesthesia or a combined general and regional block may be considered. General anaesthetic technique, the timing and drug/drug combination for the regional block must also be considered. This is a study around published studies assessing anaesthtic technique for wrist surgery. A systematic database search was performed and papers describing the effect of anaesthetic techniques were included. We found sparse evidence for what anaesthetic technique is optimal for open wrist fracture repair. In total only six studies were found using our inclusion criteria, which all supported the short term, early recovery benefits of regional anaesthesia as part of multi-modal analgesia. More protracted outcomes and putting the type of block into context of quality of recovery and patients' satisfaction is lacking in the literature. The risk for a pain rebound when the block vanishes should also be acknowledged. Therefore, further high quality studies are warranted concerning the anaesthetic technique for this type of surgery.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- end stage renal disease
- surgical site infection
- chronic kidney disease
- pain management
- type diabetes
- systematic review
- case control
- ejection fraction
- middle aged
- newly diagnosed
- adverse drug
- liver failure
- spinal cord
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- randomized controlled trial
- spinal cord injury
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- coronary artery disease
- intensive care unit
- neuropathic pain
- respiratory failure
- skeletal muscle
- weight loss
- atrial fibrillation