Peripheral nerve blocks in the cervical region: From anatomy to ultrasound-guided techniques

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Abstract

Cervical plexus nerve blocks have been employed in various head and neck operations. Both adequate anaesthesia and analgesia are attained in clinical practice. Nowadays, ultrasound imaging in regional anaesthesia is driven towards a certain objective that dictates high accuracy and safety during the implementation of peripheral nerve blocks. In the cervical region, ultrasound-guided nerve blocks have routinely been conducted only for the past few years and thus only a small number of publications pervade the current literature. Moreover, the sonoanatomy of the neck, the foundation stone of interventional techniques, is very challenging; multiple muscles and fascial layers compose a complex of compartments in a narrow anatomic region, in which local anaesthetics are injected. Therefore, this review intends to deliver new insights into ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve block techniques in the neck. The sonoanatomy of the cervical region, in addition to the cervical plexus, cervical ganglia, superior and recurrent laryngeal nerve blocks are comprehensively discussed.

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Saranteas, T., Kostroglou, A., Efstathiou, G., Giannoulis, D., Moschovaki, N., Mavrogenis, A. F., & Perisanidis, C. (2020, March 3). Peripheral nerve blocks in the cervical region: From anatomy to ultrasound-guided techniques. Dentomaxillofacial Radiology. British Institute of Radiology. https://doi.org/10.1259/DMFR.20190400

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