Improvement in I.V. Regional anaesthesia by re-exsanguination before surgery

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Abstract

A modification of an i.v. regional anaesthesia (IVRA) technique is described in which the arm is re-exsanguinated before surgery (re-IVRA). IVRA and re-IVRA were compared for quality of operative field, sensory and motor block, quality of analgesia and blood concentrations of prilocaine, lignocaine and mepivacaine in a double-blind study in 120 patients undergoing hand surgery. Re-IVRA provided a significantly better surgical field without affecting sensory or motor block. Re-exsanguination improved tolerance of the tourniquet. Plasma concentrations in the re-IVRA group showed some increases, but these were not in the toxic range. (Br. J. Anaesth. 1993; 70: 280-285). ©1993 British Journal of Anaesthesia.

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Rawal, N., Hallen, J., Amilon, A., & Hellstrand, P. (1993). Improvement in I.V. Regional anaesthesia by re-exsanguination before surgery. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 70(3), 280–285. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/70.3.280

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