Ultrasound placement of needle in three-in-one nerve block
Date First Published:
April 22, 2002
Last Updated:
March 14, 2006
Report by:
R Williams, Specialist Registrar in Accident and Emergency (Oldham Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
B Saha, Oldham Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In patients [undergoing "3-in-1" nerve block for femoral neck fractures] is [ultrasound scanning as efficatious as nerve stimulation] for [confirmation of needle placement and reducing complications]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 77-year old woman presents to the Accident and Emergency department following a simple fall in which she has sustained a fractured neck of femur. You have recently completed a secondment in anaesthetics and consider a "3-in-1" block for pain relief. One of the consultants with whom you worked stated that to perform a nerve block without using a nerve stimulator would be poor clinical practice. When you gave the example of nerve blocks in fractured neck of femur he commented that ultrasound (US) has been used as an alternative to nerve stimulators (NS) in this setting.
Search Strategy:
Medline using Ovid interface 1966 – March 2006
CinAHL using Ovid interface 1982 to March Week 2 2006
Cochrane: via NELH 2006 Issue 1. "femoral and ultrasound and anaesthesia"
CinAHL using Ovid interface 1982 to March Week 2 2006
Cochrane: via NELH 2006 Issue 1. "femoral and ultrasound and anaesthesia"
Search Details:
Medline: {[(Exp. Ultrasonography or ultrasound$.mp or sonographic guidance.mp) or (electrical nerve stimulator$.mp or electrical nerve stimulation.mp)] and (exp. Nerve block$ or femoral nerve block$.mp or 3-in-1 block.mp or three in one block$.mp or three-in-one block$.mp or triple block.mp or lateral cutaneous nerve block$.mp or obturator nerve block$.mp)} (limited to human, English and abstracts in Medline but not in CinAHL).
Cochrane: "femoral and ultrasound and anaesthesia"
Cochrane: "femoral and ultrasound and anaesthesia"
Outcome:
Medline: 137 papers were found of which 2 were relevant to the three part question.
CinAHL: 26 papers were found. None of which were relevant to the three part question.
Cochrane: 21 citations found but no new papers.
CinAHL: 26 papers were found. None of which were relevant to the three part question.
Cochrane: 21 citations found but no new papers.
Relevant Paper(s):
| Study Title | Patient Group | Study type (level of evidence) | Outcomes | Key results | Study Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultrasonographic guidance improves sensory block and onset time of three-in-one blocks. Marhofer P. Schrogendorfer K. Koinig H 1997 Austria | 40 patients (ASA II or III) undergoing hip surgery after trauma. Randomisation to either nerve stimulator (n=20) or ultrasound guided (n=20) three in one block. Quality of block was assessed for one hour at 10 min intervals using a pin prick test. |
PRCT | Quality of block as assessed by block rating scale (0 to 100) expressed as percentage of initial value. | Better for USS. US 15% +/- 10%, NS 27% +/- 14% p<0.05 | Unblinded No power study Small group Unclear if validated rating tool Matching of groups not explicit for fracture or procedure Not performed in the emergency department |
| Time to onset of block (mins) | Better with USS. US 16 +/-14, NS 27+/-16 p<0.05 | ||||
| Subjective quality of analgesia | Better for USS, US 95% vs NS 85% | ||||
| Complications Arterial puncture | Better for USS, US 0, NS 3 | ||||
| Ultrasonographic guidance reduces the amount of local anaesthetic for 3-in-1 blocks. Marhofer P. Schrodendorfer K. Wallner T. et al. 1998 Austria | 60 patients undergoing hip surgery following trauma. Randomly assigned into one of three groups20mls 0.5% bupivicaine under US guidance (A), 20mls 0.5% bupivicaine and nerve stimulator (B), 30mls 0.5% bupivicaine and nerve stimulator (C) Quality of block assessed for one hour using pin prick test at 10 min intervals |
PRCT | Quality of block as assessed by block rating scale (0 to 100) expressed as percentage of initial value | Best for USS. A 4% +/-5%, B 21% +/-11%, C 22% +/- 19%. p < 0.01 | Unblinded No power study Unclear if validated rating tool Not performed in the emergency department |
| Time to onset of block (mins) | Best with USS. A 13+/-6, B 27+/-12, C 26+/-13. p<0.01 | ||||
| Overall success rate | Best for USS. US 95% vs. NS 85% | ||||
| Complications | US None NS 2 (vascular puncture) |
Author Commentary:
Conformation of needle placement in regional anaesthesia is seen by many as a vital part of the procedure. Many anaesthetists would argue that to perform such procedures without a nerve stimulator is not best practice, and has implications within clinical governance. In the emergency department the use of a nerve stimulator for three-in-one blocks would result in muscular contraction that would cause increase pain and risk fracture displacement. Although the trials are small, the data presented would suggest that ultrasound guide 3-in-1 block may be an alternative to nerve stimulation in the emergency department.
Bottom Line:
Ultrasound guidance is better than electrical nerve stimulation at obtaining a good quality 3 in 1 femoral block.
References:
- Marhofer P. Schrogendorfer K. Koinig H. Ultrasonographic guidance improves sensory block and onset time of three-in-one blocks.
- Marhofer P. Schrodendorfer K. Wallner T. et al.. Ultrasonographic guidance reduces the amount of local anaesthetic for 3-in-1 blocks.
