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A Comparison Between a PC and a CC Approach for the Placement of Infraclavicular Perineural Catheters in Hand Surgery

Postoperative Pain | Anesthesia, Local

In outpatient hand surgery, 40% of patients report moderate to severe pain within 24 hours of the operation. Effective pain management is therefore essential to ensure a comfortable and safe return home for the patient.

Loco-regional anesthesia is the optimal method of analgesia for complex hand surgery. It involves the injection of a local anesthetic (LA) near the nerves responsible for the sensitivity of the arm. Following a single injection of long-acting local anesthetic, the maximum duration of analgesia is limited to approximately 13 hours, with great variability between individuals. In order to provide pain relief over a longer period of time, placing catheters near nerves has become a routine practice at the CHUM.

Infraclavicular nerve block is one of the most widely used loco-regional anesthesia techniques for hand surgery. This block can be achieved either by paracoracoid (PC) or costoclavicular (CC) approach. Both approaches are currently used at the CHUM.

The PC approach involves inserting a needle under the lower rim of the clavicle below the coracoid process. This approach makes it possible to reach the 3 different nerve bundles, located around the axillary artery, which are involved in the sensitivity of the hand.

The CC approach, more recently described, proposes an insertion of the needle under the lower edge of the clavicle but in a lateral way to the axillary artery which makes it possible to reach the nerves at a place where the 3 main nerve bundles are still joined together. The clustering of nerve structures at the injection site may facilitate the spread of local anesthetics.

Recent studies have demonstrated that the CC approach requires a smaller volume compared to the PC approach to achieve perineural blockade. The effective dose 90 (ED90) for the CC approach was 19 mL while it is 31 mL for the PC approach. This is explained by the greater proximity between the three nerve bundles targeted in the CC approach and a lower prevalence of anatomical variations at this level.

However, studies on the subject are rare and do not allow conclusions to be drawn on the superiority of either approach.

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Participation Requirements

  • Sex:

    ALL
  • Eligible Ages:

    18 and up

Participation Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

* Patients over 18 years old
* American Society of Anesthesiologists' classification 1 to 3
* Patients undergoing elective ambulatory hand surgery requiring the use of continuous infraclavicular nerve block

Exclusion Criteria:

* Contraindication to a peripheral nerve block
* Refusal of the patient or inability to consent
* Inability to communicate with the healthcare team or the research team
* Lack of access to the Teams telehealth platform
* Inability to understand the items of the different questionnaires
* Inability to understand ambulatory catheter follow-up instructions
* Pregnancy
* Obesity Body Mass Index \> 40
* Pre-existing neurological deficit in the operated upper limb
* Anatomical malformation not allowing one of the study blocks to be performed
* Condition preventing measurement of the primary outcome

Study Location

Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Montréal, Quebec
Canada

Contact Study Team

Primary Contact

Vicky Thiffault, RN, CCRP

[email protected]
5148908000
Backup Contact

Julie Desroches, PhD

[email protected]
5148908000
Study Sponsored By
Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Participants Required
More Information
Study ID: NCT04960046