
New trends in regional anesthesia for shoulder surgery: Avoiding devastating complications
Author(s) -
André P. Boezaart,
Patrick Tighe
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
international journal of shoulder surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0973-6042
DOI - 10.4103/0973-6042.68410
Subject(s) - anesthesiology , medicine , regional anesthesia , orthopedic surgery , brachial plexus , pain medicine , shoulder surgery , surgery , anesthesia , general surgery
Surgeons and patients are often reluctant to support regional anesthesia (RA) for shoulder and other orthopedic surgeries. This is because of the sometimes true but usually incorrectly perceived "slowing down" of operating room turnover time and the perceived potential for added morbidity. Recently, severe devastating and permanent nerve injury complications have surfaced, and this article attempts to clarify the modern place of RA for shoulder surgery and the prevention of these complications. A philosophical approach to anesthesiology and regional anesthesiology is offered, while a fresh appreciation for the well-described and often forgotten microanatomy of the brachial plexus is revisited to explain and avoid some of the devastating complications of RA for shoulder surgery.