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Canadian Journal of Anesthesia 49:566-570 (2002)
© Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society, 2002

Regional Anesthesia and Pain

Epidural bolus injection with alkalinized lidocaine improves blockade of the first sacral segment - a brief report

[L'injection épidurale d'un bolus de lidocaïne alcalinisée améliore le blocage du premier segment sacré - un résumé]

Masayuki Arakawa, MD PhD, Yukio Aoyama, MD PhD and Yoko Ohe, MD PhD

From the Second Department of Anesthesiology, Toho University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.

Address correspondence to: Dr. Masayuki Arakawa, Second Department of Anesthesiology, Toho University School of Medicine, 2-17-6 Ohashi, Meguro-ward, Tokyo 153-8515, Japan. Phone: +81-03-3468-1251; Fax: +81-03-3481-7336; E-mail: atruth{at}oha.toho-u.ac.jp

Purpose: It has been reported that the addition of epinephrine and/or bicarbonate to local anesthetic enhances the depth of epidural blockade and that initial partial bolus injection results in greater caudal spread. We evaluated the anesthetic effects of lidocaine with epinephrine and/or bicarbonate injected into the epidural space by bolus or catheter injection.

Methods: Forty-four patients undergoing epidural anesthesia with 17 mL of 2% lidocaine containing 1:200,000 epinephrine at L4–5 or L5–S1 were randomly divided into four groups. Lidocaine was administrated via epidural catheter [lidocaine catheter (LC) group] or Tuohy needle (lidocaine bolus group), lidocaine-bicarbonate was administrated via catheter (lidocaine-bicarbonate catheter group) or needle [lidocaine-bicarbonate bolus (LBB) group]. Pain threshold after repeated electrical stimulation was performed at L2 and S1 regions. Motor blockade was evaluated using the Bromage scale. Sympathetic blockade was assessed with plethysmographic waveforms from the toe.

Results: The pain threshold of the S1 dermatome in LBB group was significantly higher than in the lidocaine only groups, however, differences in the pain threshold at the L2 dermatome among the groups were insignificant. The onset of sensory blockade in the S1 dermatome in the LBB group was significantly shorter than in the LC group. Significantly greater motor blockade was achieved in the lidocaine-bicarbonate groups than in the lidocaine-only groups. The amplitude of plethysmographic waveforms significantly increased within each group.

Conclusion: Epidural bolus injection of lidocaine-bicarbonate with epinephrine improves the pain threshold and speeds the onset of the blockade of the first sacral region.




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