html5-img
1 / 30

Paediatric spinal anaesthesia clinical pearls

Paediatric spinal anaesthesia clinical pearls. Dr . S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD ( Acu ), Dip. Diab . DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD ( physio ) Mahatma Gandhi medical college and research institute – Puducherry – India . History .

chelsi
Download Presentation

Paediatric spinal anaesthesia clinical pearls

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Paediatric spinal anaesthesiaclinicalpearls Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab. DCA, Dip. Software statistics • PhD (physio) • Mahatma Gandhi medical college and research institute – Puducherry – India

  2. History • Spinal anesthesia was probably the earliest form of regional anesthesia that was considered a useful practice for children • ( Bainbridge, 1901 ; Tyrell-Gray, 1909 ). • Popularized in 1990 s

  3. Why it came to lime light ?? • Premature infants – possible hernia • Muscular and neuromuscular disease for abd. And lower limb surgery.

  4. Other indications • The safety and success of spinal • such as pyloromyotomy, gastrostomyplacement, • myelomeningocele repair, • cardiac surgery, and genitourinary procedures. • Moreover, spinal anesthesia has been successfully used in high-risk infants and • for cardiac catheterization,

  5. To consider spinal in ?? • facial dysmorphia • difficult intubation, • muscular dystrophy, • family history of malignant hyperthermia • or a full stomach with aspiration risk

  6. Contraindications • Coagulation abnormalities • Systemic sepsis or local infection at the puncture point • Uncorrected hypovolaemia • Parental refusal or an uncooperative child • Neurological abnormalities such as spina bifida, • increased intracranial pressure • Procedures lasting more than 90 minutes

  7. Are there any differences ??

  8. Wheredoes spinal cord end ? • The conusmedullaris lies at a lower level in infants; • therefore the L4-5 or L5-sacral interspace should be chosen for the dural puncture

  9. Difference

  10. Intercristal line ?? • The intercristal line crosses the midline at the S1 interspace in neonates, and at the L5 interspace in older children

  11. differences • The approach to the subarachnoid space requires a straighter trajectory of the needle than in older children. • The distance to the subarachnoid space is small, • cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) flow may be slow, • ligamentumflavum is thin

  12. Difference • 4 mL/kg (2 mL/kg in adults) with 50% being in the spinal canal compared with 25% in adults • Duration – short • Even bupivacaine 90 minutes

  13. Technique • Positioning – • Flex back but extend neck • Sedate ?? • Enough local , EMLA 60 minutes before • Ready with airways

  14. Technique • Standard monitors, IV access • Distance from skin to subarachnoid space (cm) = 0. 03 x height (cm) • 1 inch 22 g spinal needle • depth of 1 to 1.5 cm • distance in millimeters = (age in years • x2) + 10. • Aspirate and slowly inject • Don’t lift legs to place cautery

  15. Sitting spinal – neonate

  16. Technique • The ligamentumflavum is very soft in children and a distinctive “pop” may not be perceived when the dura is penetrated. • Be gentle and slow

  17. Straight – 1 ml syringe

  18. Characters of nerve fibres • Small nerve fibres • Nonmyelinated • Small distances between nodes of ranvier • Lumbar lordosis - Absent but in two years it may be present

  19. Differences • fibrous sheaths around nerves are not well developed and myelination is not complete until about 2 years of age. • This makes immature nerves more sensitive to local anaestheticsand less concentrated solutions than are used in adults usually result in a dense block.

  20. In term babies the length of the spinal cord is about 20 cm (in adults 65–70 cm). • This means that the length to weight ratio is four or five times higher in newborns than in adults. • so -- Dose differences

  21. Assessing the block is difficult. • The response to cold spray can be useful, • observation of paradoxical respiratory muscle movement • loss of response to a low amperage tetanic stimulus.

  22. Level ?? • Pacifier nipple • Spread of the block is less predictable • High level means – • no BP fall but apnea !! • Monitor 24 hours

  23. Bupi and tetra • Heavy bupivacaine is recommended in a dose of 0.3-1 mg/kg = 0.07-0.2 mL/kg of 0.5% solution. • 2 kg infant – hernia – 0.2 ml ?? • 6 kg infant – circumcision – 0.5 ml ?? • 14 kg 2 years – orchipexy – 1.5 ml • 1% tetracaine, a dose of 0.5 mg/kg • Empty the needle

  24. Other drugs • Doses ranging between 0.75 and 1.25 mg/kg of isobaric solution of levobupivacaine • addition of 100 μgclonidine to 20 ml bupi and inject the necessary dose • Or • Add 1 μg / kg • Other drug dosage schedules

  25. Doses in mg / kg

  26. Complications • Less than 6 months of age, immature hepatic metabolism of amide drugs • Failure rate – 10 – 20 % • Brady – ok but hypo - ?? • PDPH – restlessness . Hearing loss !! • Potential traumatic puncture • But – overall – very rare

  27. Causes of haemodynamic stability • immaturity of the sympathetic nervous system • smaller blood volume that is present in the lower extremities

  28. Summary Dose and drugs Position Dexterity Complications Spinal – safe In safe hands

  29. Thank you all

More Related