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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New femoral nerve block technique for dog leg surgery pain relief

By Portela, Diego A et al.·Published in Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia·2013·Department of Veterinary Clinics, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Femoral nerve block: a novel psoas compartment lateral pre-iliac approach in dogs.

Species:
dog
Movement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 15 dogs undergoing surgery on their back legs received a new type of pain relief called a lateral pre-iliac femoral nerve block, combined with a sciatic nerve block. This approach helped reduce pain during surgery and kept the dogs comfortable in the first two hours after the procedure without needing extra pain medication. The technique was effective in minimizing their responses to surgical stimulation, indicating that it provided good pain control. Overall, this new method shows promise for helping dogs recover more comfortably from pelvic limb surgeries.

People also search for: dog pelvic limb surgery pain relief · femoral nerve block for dogs · post-operative pain management in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a new approach to block the femoral nerve and to evaluate the distribution of a dye injected into the psoas compartment using a new femoral nerve block approach; to assess its clinical application, when combined with a sciatic nerve block, for surgical anaesthesia/analgesia of the pelvic limb in dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective anatomical, research and clinical study. ANIMALS: Two dog cadavers; two dogs that had to be euthanized for reasons unrelated to this study, and 15 dogs undergoing pelvic limb orthopaedic surgery. METHODS: Phase 1: anatomical dissections were performed to determine a simple method to approach the femoral nerve within the psoas compartment. Phase 2: 0.1 mL kg(-1) of a lidocaine-new methylene blue solution was injected bilaterally after successful electrolocation of the femoral nerve in two anaesthetized dogs. Colorant spread was evaluated through femoral nerve dissections after euthanasia. Phase 3: in 15 dogs undergoing pelvic limb orthopaedic surgery under light general anaesthesia with isoflurane, intra-operative analgesic effect (cardiovascular responses) and early post-operative pain score, of the novel femoral nerve block combined with a sciatic nerve block as the sole analgesic protocol, were evaluated. RESULTS: Phase 1: a needle inserted from the lateral aspect of the lumbar muscles, cranially to the iliac crest and with a 30-45° caudo-medial direction, reaches the femoral nerve in the caudal portion of the psoas compartment. Phase 2: Four femoral nerves were stained >2 cm. Phase 3: this novel lateral pre-iliac approach, combined with the sciatic nerve block, blunted the intra-operative cardiovascular response to surgical stimulation in 13 out of 15 anaesthetized dogs. In addition, rescue analgesia was not required in the early post-operative 2-hour period. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The lateral pre-iliac femoral nerve block technique may provide adequate intra- and early post-operative pain relief in dogs undergoing pelvic limb surgery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22765834/