Daily Routine
Resident/residents assigned to the block rotation are responsible for the following
- Please review the surgery schedule the day before and identify the potential cases for the peripheral nerve blocks. Discuss their management with the faculty assigned to do the blocks.
- On the morning of surgery communicate with the anesthesia team assigned to the patient.
- Please communicate with the circulating nurse in the room and the nurse in the holding area so they can send for the patient 30-45 minutes ahead of time. This can prevent the delay in the operating rooms
- Please make sure that the equipment needed to perform the block is available and
In working order
- Please test and make sure that resuscitation equipment is ready.
- Please be familiar with local anesthetic toxicity and its treatment including the lipid emulsion infusion for bupivacaine toxicity
- Please explain to the patient the purpose of the block, technique and potential risks in a language the patient can understand.
- Please make sue the patient is checked in before you transfer the patient to the block room
- Please verify the identity of the patient and do the time out with the faculty.
- Please verify about the NPO status, allergies, the site and side of the surgery.
- Please mark the site and the side for the surgical procedure
- Place and IV, and monitors like EKG, Pulse Oximeter and blood pressure monitor and record the baseline vital sigs.
- Administer judicious IV sedation.
- Please prepare the area and drape it in a sterile fashion.
- If you plan to use the nerve stimulator, please make sure it is grounded
- If you plan to use the ultrasound probe make sure it is the right frequency probe and the sterile sleeve and the sterile gel are available
- Please document the details for the block on the block form
- Transfer the care to the anesthesia team assigned to that patient
- Give a copy of the block form to the coder for billing
- Place an ultrasound picture of the block in the patient's record
Types of blocks
Most common blocks we will perform during this rotation are
- Brachial plexus block
- Lumbo-sacral plexus block
- Paravertebral block
- Transverse Abdominis Plane (TAP) block
Brachial Plexus Block
This can be done using
- Interscalene approach
- Suprclavicular approach
- Infraclavicular approach
- Axillary approach
1 |
What peripheral nerve block has the highest rate of complications |
2 |
Ulnar is the nerve that is missed with the interscalene block |
Lumbo-sacral Plexus Block
This is done using
- Lumbar plexus block
- Femoral nerve block
- Fascia Iliaca block
- Sciatic nerve block
- Popliteal nerve block
Paravertebral Block
This can be done either unilaterally or bilaterally for
- Mastectomy
- Cholecystectomy
- Inguinal hernia repair
- Nephrectomy
Transverse Abdominis (TAP) Block
This can be done unilaterally or bilaterally
- For inguinal or umbilical hernia repair
- Total abdominal hysterectomy