Putting it all together: recommendations for improving pain management in plastic surgical procedures: hand surgery. - 2014

BACKGROUND: Approaches to upper extremity anesthesia in hand surgery include regional blocks, wide-awake hand surgery with local anesthesia, and stellate ganglion blocks. CONCLUSIONS: Pain management in hand surgery can be achieved through regional blocks and wide-awake techniques that do not necessitate general anesthesia in an effort to improve safety, convenience, cost savings, and efficiency. METHODS: Retrospective review of the literature from 2000 to 2014 published on the delivery of local and regional anesthesia during hand surgery. Included studies describe techniques of administration and treatment outcomes to identify common practices of pain management in hand surgery. RESULTS: Regional blocks provide sufficient anesthesia for hand surgery and have been found to improve postoperative pain and measured outcome scores. Wide-awake surgery offers many advantages including minimizing anesthetic risk and expense, permitting patient participation in operative evaluation, decreasing hospital time, and improving functional outcomes scores.


English

0032-1052

00006534-201410002-00020 [pii] 10.1097/PRS.0000000000000675 [doi]


IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXED


Curtis National Hand Center


Journal Article