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SPM 200 Clinical Skills Lab 4 Local Anesthesia / Digital Block Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT
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Anatomy of Skin
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Arteries of the Hand Each hand has 4 digital arteries. Common Digital Arteries Dorsal Metacarpal Arteries Palmar Metacarpal Arteries Proper Digital Arteries
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Nerves of the Hand Digital nerves run down the medial and lateral sides of each digit.
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Standard Precautions All patients are potentially infectious. Good handwashing is the key to reducing nosocomial infections Wash before and after patient contact Wear gloves, a mask, eye protection, face shield and gown when contact with blood or other body fluids is likely (a more detailed description can be found at: www.cdc.gov/ncidod/hip/blood/universa.htm)
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Risks to You: Hepatitis B, C & HIV Risk after Needle Stick Exposure Hepatitis B: 6-30% Hepatitis C:3 – 10% HIV: 0.3%
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Management of Exposure Wash immediately Report incident to supervisor (3 red tops & file incident report) Obtain history from the source patient (HIV, Hepatitis or risk factors)
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Management of Exposure Report to Employee Health or Emergency Department (LSU Interim Hospital Emergency Room) Counseling will be provided regarding the need for post exposure prophylaxis (see CDC recommendations)
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Indications Digital Block Excellent anesthesia (dorsal and volar) Repair of Lacerations beyond Metacarpal Incisions and Abscesses and Paronychia Nail removal
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Contraindications Digital Block Long procedure – short acting Multiple injuries Patient allergies
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Commonly Used Anesthetics for Wound Repair Lidocaine w/epi & w/o epi 0.5 – 1.0 % (Duration 1-2 hrs) Prilocaine 0.5 - 1.0 %(Duration 15-45 min) Bupivacaine 0.25 %(Duration 4-8 hrs) Safe → Etidocaine → Bupivacaine → Lidocaine → Less Safe
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Use of Epinephrine Increase anesthetic delivery Slow diffusion through tissue Increase the max dose of anesthetic burns (acidic) Cut off circulation in areas (penis, digit, tip of nose, earlobe
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Complications of Local Anesthetic - Tx Blanching of nearby skin – Stop Urticaria (hives) – Stop Syncope w/o edema – Monitor HR & BP Arterial Puncture –Direct pressure Systemic Toxicity – CNS deficits
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Contraindications Neuro Block Pervious Reaction to Local Anesthetic Liver Disease, Heart Disease, R/O Amide-Based Anesthetics Previous use of MAO inhibitors Anesthetics will reduce healing in wound
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Warning Signs: Systemic Toxicity Tinnitus, numbness of tongue, lightheadedness, drowsiness Visual disturbances Muscle twitching, convulsions, coma, apnea
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Digital Block Injection Technique
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Patient Injection Technique
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Hints to Minimize Patient’s Pain Small Needle Inject Anesthetic Slowly Add Sodium Bicarbonate – basic solutions decrease burn Warm Solution
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Invasive/Non-Invasive Procedure Notes Proper Patient Identification Site Verification Pre / Post Medication Pain Control Intra / Post-Procedural monitoring Complications, if any Management of complications
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