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General Orthopaedics

PERIOPERATIVE PERIPHERAL NERVE BLOCK COMPLICATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH FOOT AND ANKLE SURGERIES

The Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA) and Canadian Orthopaedic Research Society (CORS) Virtual Annual Meeting 2020, held online, 19–20 June 2020.



Abstract

Anesthetic peripheral nerve blocks (PNB) have been shown to be more advantageous than general anesthesia in a variety of surgical operations. In comparison to conventional methods of general anesthesia, the choice of regional localized infiltration has been shown to shorten hospital stays, decrease hospital readmissions, allow early mobilization, and reduce narcotic use. Perioperative complications of PNBs have been reported at varying rates in literature. Thus, the purpose of this study was to provide a review on the clinical evidence of PNB complications associated with foot and ankle surgeries.

A systematic review of the literature was completed using PubMed search terms: “lower extremity”, “foot and ankle”, “nerve block”, and “complications”. All studies reporting minor and major complications were considered along with their acute management, treatments, and postoperative follow up timelines. The range of complications was reported for Sensory Abnormalities, Motor Deficits, Skin and systemic complications (local anesthetic systemic toxicity & intravascular injections). A designation of the scientific quality (Level I-IV) of all papers was assigned then a summary evidence grade was determined.

The search strategy extracted 378 studies of which 38 studies were included after criteria review. Block complications were reported in 20 studies while 18 studies had no complications to report. The quality of evidence reviewed ranged from Level I to Level IV studies with follow up ranging from twenty four hours to one-three year timelines. The range of complications for all studies reporting sensory abnormalities was 0.53 to 45.00%, motor deficits 0.05 to 16.22% and skin and systemic complications 0.05 to 6.67%. Sensory abnormalities that persisted at last follow up occurred in six studies with incidence ranging from 0.23 to 1.57%. Two studies reported motor complications of a foot drop with an incidence of 0.05% and 0.12%. When considering only the highest quality studies (Level 1) that had complications to report, the complications rate was 10.00% to 45.00% for sensory abnormalities, 7.81 to 16.22% for motor deficits, 6.67% for skin complications and 2.50% for systemic complications.

High quality studies (Level I providing Summary Grade A Evidence) reporting all complications with a range of incidence from 0 to 45%. While most of these complications were not serious and permanent, some were significant including sensory abnormalities, foot drop and CRPS. Based on this systematic review of the current literature, the authors emphasize a significant rate of complications with PNB and recommend that patients are appropriately informed prior to consenting to these procedures.


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