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Wet Taps…Now What? Lauren Toler NU794 University of Pennsylvania.

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Presentation on theme: "Wet Taps…Now What? Lauren Toler NU794 University of Pennsylvania."— Presentation transcript:

1 Wet Taps…Now What? Lauren Toler NU794 University of Pennsylvania

2 A Review… Indications for Epidural Anesthesia – Analgesia alone (labor) – Adjunct to general anesthesia – A sole technique for surgical anesthesia

3 Layers Skin Subcutaneous Supraspinous ligament Interspinous ligament Ligamentum flavum Epidural Dura Subdural

4 Relative ContraindicationsAbsolute Contraindications Patients with difficulty understanding procedure Patient refusal Unable to cooperate with practitionerUncorrected coagulopathies Pt with chronic neurologic d/oInfection at the site Pt with fixed volume cardiac statesElevated ICP LA allergy Demyelinating lesion Spinal deformity Stenotic heart lesion

5 Differential Blockade Review B fibers- sympathectomy C fibers- temperature, pain (dull) A-delta- temperature, pain (sharp) A-gamma- muscle spindle fibers A-beta- vibration, touch, pressure A-alpha- proprioception

6 Un-intened dural puncture Options Thread Spinal Catheter Re-site Epidural First PDPH described over 100 years ago in 1898 Risk of inadvertant dural puncture is between 0.2-4% Third most common cause litigation in obstetric anesthesia according to closed claims

7 What would you do? In a ten year retrospective study conducted in the UK revealed out of 72 unintended dural punctures: 49%-spinal catheter, 51% re-site epidural Instituted hospital guidelines: – 28% Spinal cath – 41% Re-site epidural – 31% Allowed either Does your hospital have a policy?

8 Thread spinal catheter Pros Superior analgesia Limit multiple sticks Minimizes time Cons Infection Spinal Cord Trauma Neurotoxicity Inappropriate Injection

9 Infection Risk with spinal catheters Infections associated with meningitis Streptococcus Infections associated with epidural abscess S. aureus Data is inconclusive

10 Spinal catheter & spinal cord trauma Where does the spinal cord end in an adult? – L1-2 (range: T12 to L3) – 19% of population conus medullaris ends below L1 A majority of the time, anesthetists mis-identify level of interspace – 29% correctly identified – 3% at a lower interspace – 68% of the time, interspace identified at higher interspaces What can you do? – Limit catheter distance – Be weary of parasthesias during insertion Broadbent, C.R., Maxwell, W.B., Ferrie, R., Wilson, D.J., Gawne-Cain, M. and Russell, R. (2000). Ability of anaesthetists to identify a marked lumbar interspace. Anaesthesia, 55, 1122-1126.

11 Spinal catheters Inappropriate injection Local injection intended for epidural catheter – High spinal – Total spinal How can we prevent this? – Education – Institute protocols – Label catheter, chart, electronic record, pump, patient door – Remove any additional ports (3-way stop cocks) – Hand off report

12 Prevention It’s a spinal catheter!!!!

13 Local Toxicity Symptoms

14 Re-site Epidural Catheter Pros Increased safety eliminates potential to be misidentified as spinal catheter Cons Infection Inferior analgesia compared to spinal cath Increased risk of headache Unexpected high block/high spinal

15 References Sharpe P. Accidental dural puncture in obstetrics. BJA CEPD Reviews 2001;1:81-4. Tourtellotte WW, Haerer AF, Heller GL, Somers JE. Post lumbar puncture headache. Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas, 1964. Chadwick HS. An analysis of obstetric anesthesia cases from the American Society of Anesthesiologists closed claims project database. Int J Obstet Anesth 1996;5:258-63. http://www.apsf.org/newsletters/html/2014/winter/ltr02-spinal.htm


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