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Anesth Pain Med ; 9(5): e91216, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31903328

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Predicting the spread of anesthesia after intrathecal injection of plain local anesthetics is challenging owing to both patient and anesthesiologist-related factors. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to examine the initial patient-reported sensory changes during intrathecal injections and used multi-level analyses to examine the relationships between these changes and other major factors affecting the spread of anesthesia. METHODS: The participants were 120 consecutive patients with the American Society of Anesthesiologists status I and II, who were scheduled for open repair of inguinal hernias under spinal anesthesia. Lumbar puncture was performed at the midline of the L3 - L4 vertebrae and 3 mL of 0.5% isobaric bupivacaine was administered at 0.25 mL/s. The onset, dermatome, and side of the initial subjective sensory changes (ISSCs) were assessed by patient report. The extent of sensory loss to ice and pinprick stimuli, the degree of motor block in lower extremities, blood pressure, and heart rate were examined at 5-minutes intervals for 20 minutes after intrathecal injection. RESULTS: All patients reported ISSCs after 9 (4, 18) seconds [median (minimum, maximum)] of the intrathecal injection onset. In 66.7% of the patients, ISSCs occurred in the L1 - L5 dermatomes. Three patients experienced pain during the early intraoperative period, and described ISSCs in the sacral dermatome. Height, mean blood pressure, and ISSCs were significantly correlated with sensory loss. Faster onset, lower dermatome, and floor-side of ISSCs predicted a narrower area of sensory loss, with dermatome as the most important indicator. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that ISSC, primarily based on dermatome, is a significant predictor for spinal anesthesia spread.

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