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The official account of the @cwru @metrohealthCLE Emergency Medicine Ultrasound Fellowship. Tweets aren't medical advice or views/policy of these institutions.

Apr 8, 2021, 12 tweets

Today's ultrasound lecture by @mtabbut about ultrasound guided nerve blocks. #metroEUS #FOAMed #FOAMus #MedTwitter #POCUS @SLWerner_EM @DianeGramer @RJonesSonoEM @MetroHealth_EM

Nerve blocks allow for the management of acute pain or painful procedures in the ED. Decreases need for opiates and sedations. Ultrasound guided vs blind decreases inadvertent vascular or nerve injection and allows targeted depot of anesthetic agent around the nerve.

Multiple studies demonstrate the efficacy of ultrasound guidance over landmark guidance.

Characteristic appearance of a nerve = hyperechoic, honeycomb appearance, often triangular, may demonstrate anisotropy.

Indicated for acute pain management and acutely painful procedures.

Anesthetic agents work by blocking Na+ channels thereby preventing action potentials from generating a depolarization.

Various agents will have different duration of actions and doses. Need to know the max dose. Lidocaine = 4.5mg/kg, Bupivocaine = 2 mg/kg. Determine your dose then dilute to reach the volume you need.

Toxicity = Neuro and Cardiac. Think about what preventing depolarization of respective nerves will do.

Ulnar Nerve Block

Median Nerve Block

Radial Nerve Block

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