Spinal anaesthesia also called sub-arachnoid block (SAB)
Needles used :
- Whitacre
- Sprotte
These have pencil tip point end (therefore decrease post puncture headache)
Layers pierced :
- Skin
- Subcutaneus
- Supraspinous ligament
- Interspinous ligament
- Ligamentum flavum (loss of ressistance felt as it is pierced)
- Dura
- Arachnoid - subarachnoid space
Drugs :
- Lignocaine (5%- heavy due to dextrose )
- Tetracaine (0.5% in 5% dextrose)
- Bupivacaine (0.5% in 8% dextrose)
Factors affecting height of anaesthesia :
- Dose (most important)
- Baricity of solution
- Volume of drug
- Position of patient
- Age
- Height
- Pregnancy
- Abdominal Tumors
Effects of Spinal Anaesthesia :
Blocks Sympathetic system at the concerned level (therefore Increases Parasympathetic)
Thus Hypotension with Tachycardia (Marey's law) (tachycardia because T1-T4 sympathetic is intact and so there is compensatory tachycardia)
But with High Spinal Block -- there is Hypotension with Bradycardia (as T1-T4 sympathetic also blocked)
Other points to remember :
- Autonomic block is 2 segments higher than sensory.
- Maximum breathing capacity and active exhalation decrease because of intercostal paralysis.
- Respiration is severely affected only if C3,4,5 involved (i.e very high spinal block)
- Nausea, Vomiting
- Vasodialator , therefore heat loss - shivering (T/t - Pethidine)
- Successful sign -- Flacid and engorged Penis (due to paralysis of Nervi Ergentis )
- Most Common Complication : Hypotension Management for this : Prophylaxis - Preloading 1 - 1.5 L Coloid
- Curative : Foot end elevation
- Colloids , Vasopressor
- If Bradycardia - Atropine
Post Spinal Headache : (Usually Occipital)
1. Low - pressure headache because of leak of CSF
Therefore structures in brain are dragged down.
2. Presents :
- 24 - 48hrs
- Mostly > 90% in 7-10days
- Almost all by 3weeks
3. Prevention : Use pencil tip needle
4. Curative T/t :
- IV fluids
- Analgesics
- Inject 25 - 50 ml NS in epidural space
- BEST -- Inject 15 - 20 ml autologus blood in epidural space (blood patch)
Other Complications (of Spinal Anaesthesia)
- Cauda equina syndrome
- Paraplegia
- 6th Nerve paralysis
- 1 , 9 , 10 nerve involvement
- Anterior spinal artery syndrome
- Meningitis
- Backache
Contraindications :
- Raised ICT
- Refusal of patient
- Infection at local site
- Bleeding diasthesis
- Hypotension , hypovolemia
- Spinal deformities
- Hypertension
Saddle block anesthesia :
- A form of spinal anesthesia that produces loss of sensation in the buttocks, perineum, and inner thighs.
- If a patient is kept sitting for several minutes after the injection of a small volume of a hyperbaric solution of local anaesthetic, a classical "saddle block" affecting only the sacral nerve roots will result.
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