IVRA (Intravenous Regional Anesthesia): Theory, tips and tricks

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @carlao2536
    @carlao2536 Год назад +3

    Great video and clear explanation. Thank you.

  • @aftabahmed9143
    @aftabahmed9143 Год назад +3

    Nicely explained

  • @Elneato
    @Elneato Год назад +1

    I had a Bier's block fail today for Colles' fracture reduction in the emergency room. Systolic was 155mmHg (in the other arm), double tourniquet inflated to 260mmHg in sequential manner as you describe here, but after injecting 60mL of prilocaine 0.5% the arm went purple, the capillary refill was quite brisk and there was no appreciable block at all ...Not really sure if the tourniquet was wrong or he had a serious difference in blood pressures between the arms... But a hematoma block with lidocaine/adrenaline solved the problem ;)
    Would you consider doing a video on hematoma blocks in future? I'm an ER doc and I'm a huge fan of hematoma blocks for reduction of distal radius fractures, and I've had success with hematoma block for reduction of ankle fractures as well.

  • @hootie6787
    @hootie6787 11 месяцев назад

    I'm going in for this, this week and uh, this didn't help feel better

  • @tashaalbus7791
    @tashaalbus7791 Год назад

    That technique seems a bit risky for giving yourself a needle stick injury.

    • @regionalanesthesiology
      @regionalanesthesiology  Год назад +2

      It should be no more risky than performing a regular IV cannulation. Overall it's a fairly safe, effective and simple technique, especially when you've got a quick procedure that doesn't warrant a brachial plexus block. Thanks for watching!!