Traditionally, placement of the epidural catheter is based on hand feel of passing through the ligamentum flavum as well as "loss of resistance" while injecting the air through the needle. However, both are subjective and not necessarily encountered consistently. Moreover, the onset of sensory block is usually slow, thus making confirmation of catheter position a tough task and may delay the turnover of the operating room. The only way to confirm the catheter position objectively without delaying surgery is to find a reliable indicator within minutes of local anesthetic injection. In this study, we try to use the change of temperature in the big toe as a surrogate indicator of correct epidural catheterization.
Epidural anesthesia loading dose: 17ml 2% xylocaine + 2.3ml sodium bicarbonate + 2ml Rapifen (1088 mcg) + 0.1 mg epinephrine
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
40
drug combination: 2% lidocaine 17 ml + 2 ml alfentanil (544 mcg x 2 = 1088 mcg) + 7% sodium bicarbonate 2.3 ml (1.9 mEq) + 0.1mg epinephrine (1:200000)
Taipei Medical University/Wan Fang Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan
RECRUITINGmeasurement of skin temperature change over big toe after epidural local anesthetic injection
SPECTRUM 9000MB to detect lower limb color changes
Time frame: within 10 mins after injection
measurement of skin sensation change between inguinal area to umbilicus
tested by alcohol sponge
Time frame: within 15 mins after injection
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