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1.
J Burn Care Res ; 41(1): 224-227, 2020 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31714578

ABSTRACT

Autologous skin grafting from the thigh is frequently required for treatment of burns and is associated with intense pain at the donor site. Local anesthetic-based (LA) nerve blocks of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (LFCN) have been demonstrated to provide analgesia when the graft is taken from the lateral thigh. However, the duration of these single injection blocks has been reported to average only 9 hours, whereas the pain from the procedure lasts days or weeks. Continuous LA nerve blocks can also be used to provide analgesia during serial debridement of burns, although this requires placement of a perineural catheter which may increase infection risk in a population with an increased susceptibility to infection. Cryoneurolysis of the LFCN can potentially provide analgesia of the lateral thigh for skin graft harvesting or serial burn debridement that lasts far longer than conventional LA nerve blocks. Here, we present a series of three patients who received a combination of a LA nerve block and cryoneurolysis nerve block of the LFCN for analgesia of the lateral thigh. Two of these patients had the blocks placed before harvesting a split thickness skin graft. The third received the blocks for outpatient wound care of a burn to the lateral thigh. In all cases, the resulting analgesia lasted more than 1 week. A single cryoneurolysis block of the LFCN successfully provided extended duration analgesia of the lateral thigh for autologous skin graft donor site or wound care of a burn in three patients.


Subject(s)
Burns/therapy , Cryosurgery , Femoral Nerve , Nerve Block , Pain, Procedural/therapy , Skin Transplantation/adverse effects , Adult , Aged, 80 and over , Burns/complications , Burns/diagnostic imaging , Debridement/adverse effects , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pain, Procedural/diagnostic imaging , Pain, Procedural/etiology , Thigh , Transplant Donor Site , Ultrasonography
2.
A A Pract ; 13(9): 338-341, 2019 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31385816

ABSTRACT

The main purported benefit of suture-style catheters is the ability to secure the catheter at 2 sites, thereby decreasing the likelihood of catheter dislodgement. An additional benefit is the ability to precisely control the placement of the orifice to infuse local anesthetic. Here we present the case of a patient undergoing open ankle surgery for whom placement of a conventional through-the-needle popliteal sciatic perineural catheter for postoperative analgesia was attempted. Despite multiple attempts, the catheter repeatedly advanced beyond the nerve. Placement of a suture catheter was then attempted, and the catheter was successfully placed on the first attempt.


Subject(s)
Ankle Fractures/surgery , Catheterization/instrumentation , Catheters , Nerve Block , Anesthetics, Local , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Ropivacaine , Sciatic Nerve , Sutures
3.
Cogn Emot ; 29(4): 695-701, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24916358

ABSTRACT

Emotions have been proposed to inform risky decision-making through the influence of affective physiological responses on subjective value. The ability to perceive internal body states, or "interoception" may influence this relationship. Here, we examined whether interoception predicts participants' degree of loss aversion, which has been previously linked to choice-related arousal responses. Participants performed both a heartbeat-detection task indexing interoception and a risky monetary decision-making task, from which loss aversion, risk attitudes and choice consistency were parametrically measured. Interoceptive ability correlated selectively with loss aversion and was unrelated to the other value parameters. This finding suggests that specific and separable component processes underlying valuation are shaped not only by our physiological responses, as shown in previous findings, but also by our interoceptive access to such signals.


Subject(s)
Decision Making/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Interoception/physiology , Risk Reduction Behavior , Adolescent , Adult , Arousal/physiology , Female , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Young Adult
5.
Emotion ; 12(6): 1393-7, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22775125

ABSTRACT

Studies of cognitive reappraisal have demonstrated that reinterpreting a stimulus can alter emotional responding, yet few studies have examined the durable effects associated with reinterpretation-based emotion regulation strategies. Evidence for the enduring effects of emotion regulation may be found in clinical studies that use cognitive restructuring (CR) techniques in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) to alleviate anxiety. These techniques are based on cognitive theories of anxiety that suggest these disorders arise from biased cognitions; therefore, changing a person's thoughts will elicit durable changes in an individual's emotional responses. Despite the considerable success of CBT for anxiety disorders, durable effects associated with emotion regulation have not been thoroughly examined in the context of a laboratory paradigm. The goal of this study was to determine whether CR, a technique used in CBT and similar to cognitive reappraisal, could attenuate conditioned fear responses, and whether the effect would persist over time (24 hr). We conditioned participants using images of snakes or spiders that were occasionally paired with a mild shock to the wrist while we obtained subjective fear reports and electrodermal activity (EDA). After conditioning, half of the participants were randomly assigned to CR training aimed at decreasing their emotional response to the shock and the conditioned stimuli, while the other half received no such training. All participants returned 24 hr later to repeat the conditioning session. Compared with control participants, CR participants demonstrated a reduction in fear and EDA across sessions. These findings suggest that CR has durable effects on fear responding.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Fear/physiology , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Adult , Electroshock/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
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