Regional Anesthesia in TraumaMedicine
Date
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Wu, Janice J
Lollo, Loreto
Grabinsky, Andreas
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Anesthesiology Research and Practice
Abstract
Regional anesthesia is an established method to provide analgesia for patients in the operating room and during the postoperative
phase.While regional anesthesia offers unique advantages, as shown by the recent military experience, it is not commonly utilized
in the prehospital or emergency department setting. Most often, regional anesthesia techniques for traumatized patients are first
utilized in the operating room for procedural anesthesia or for postoperative pain control.While infiltration or single nerve block
procedures are often used by surgeons or emergency medicine physicians in the preoperative phase, more advanced techniques
such as plexus block procedures or regional catheter placements are more commonly performed by anesthesiologists for surgery
or postoperative pain control. These regional techniques offer advantages over intravenous anesthesia, not just in the perioperative
phase but also in the acute phase of traumatized patients and during the initial transport of injured patients. Anesthesiologists
have extensive experience with regional techniques and are able to introduce regional anesthesia into settings outside the operating
room and in the early treatment phases of trauma patients.
Description
Citation
Anesthesiology Research and Practice Volume 2011, Article ID 713281,
