METHODS: Sixty-one adult patients who underwent diaphyseal plating of the forearm under WALANT between the period of January 2019 and January 2021. It consists of 31 radius fractures, 15 ulna fractures and 15 ipsilateral radius and ulna fractures. Outcomes evaluated were duration of stay, peri-operative numerical pain rating scale, peri-operative blood pressure and heart rate, visual analogue scale for anxiety, blood loss, surgery duration, adverse effect, patient's satisfaction and any complications at 6 months follow up.
RESULTS: Fifty-four patients (88.5%) were male and 7 patients (11.5%) were female with a mean age of 31.7 years (SD = 13.564). Thirty-eight out of 61 patients were totally pain free throughout the surgery. Ten (13%) patients reported pain during muscle dissection, 14 (18%) patients reported pain during bone manipulation and 12 (16%) patients reported pain during bone drilling. There was no significant difference in pain score between radius and ulna bones (P > .05). There was a significant change in blood pressure after LA infiltration (P < .01). The mean estimated blood loss was 27.39 ml (SD = 11.44) and the mean duration of post-surgery hospital stay was 1 day (SD = 1.026). Fifty-six patients (92%) recommended diaphyseal plating of the forearm under WALANT. None of the patients required conversion to general anesthesia and had any adverse events or infection during 6 months follow up.
CONCLUSIONS: Diaphyseal plating of the forearm under WALANT is a feasible alternative anesthesia technique and is well tolerated by patients.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic III.
METHODS: This was a prospective study with patients divided into either the WALANT or GA cohort. The waiting time for surgery, Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety and Information Scale, blood pressure, and heart rate were measured. Postsurgical questionnaires with the visual analog scale were completed. The surgeon's feedback on the ease of ganglion stalk visibility and usage of diathermy as a measure of a bloodless field was recorded. Patients reported the amount of analgesia consumed and overall satisfaction with the operation via the Surgical Satisfaction-8 questionnaire.
RESULTS: A total of 42 patients underwent wrist ganglion excision in 2 orthopedic centers over a period of 2 years, with 21 undergoing GA and 22 undergoing WALANT. The GA group was more anxious about anesthetic use with a higher demand for information about GA (P = .04). The duration of surgery was significantly shorter in the WALANT group and with a lower diathermy usage (P < .001). There was no difference in terms of surgical difficulty and stalk visualization. The visual analog scale pain score was significantly lower in the WALANT group than in the GA group immediately after surgery (P = .04) and on discharge (P = .004). While at home for 2 weeks, the WALANT group (mean = 2.91 tablets) consumed significantly fewer analgesic tablets than the GA group (mean = 6.25 tablets). However, both groups were satisfied with their experience.
CONCLUSIONS: Wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet technique in the excision of ganglions provides another option of anesthesia with painless experiences, and no pain rebound after surgery. Patients were less anxious about WALANT than GA. Excision can be performed without diathermy usage with similar visualization of the stalk.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic II.
METHODS: Twenty-four participants were randomly assigned to the therapeutic group (n = 19) (1% lidocaine in 1:100,000 adrenaline) and control group (n = 5) (2% lidocaine alone). Clinical parameters, including skin necrosis, duration of recovery of sensation, and lidocaine toxicity, were monitored. The serum lidocaine level was measured at different time intervals using a high-performance liquid chromatography reagent.
RESULTS: No lidocaine toxicity was recorded in any participant. The therapeutic group had a longer time for recovery of sensation. There was a significant difference in the serum lidocaine levels between both the groups at all time intervals up to 6 hours, with all participants exhibiting serum lidocaine levels below the mild toxicity level of 6.0 μg/mL.
CONCLUSIONS: Lidocaine used within a safe recommended dose in wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet for distal radius plating is clinically and biochemically safe.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Determining the clinical and biochemical safety profile of lidocaine with adrenaline in wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet can promote wider use of this technique.
METHODS: This retrospective study was performed at Prince Court Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from January 2020 until June 2021. Ninety-three patients who presented with numbness of fingers, hand, or upper limb; forearm pain; and muscle weakness. They were diagnosed with lacertus syndrome on the basis of local tenderness at the lacertus fibrosus with either weakness of flexor pollicis longus and flexor digitorum profundus of the index finger or paresthesia over the thenar eminence. The patients underwent 3 months of hand therapy, and those with no symptom improvement were offered lacertus release performed by a single surgeon. The surgical technique consists of a surgical incision starting from a point 2 cm distally and 2 cm radially to the medial epicondyle. The incision projects 2 cm distally in an oblique fashion toward the radial styloid. A wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet (WALANT) technqiue was utilized and 20 mL of local anesthesic was injected subcutaneously around this region at least 20 minutes before the surgery. Careful dissection was made subcutaneously, and the lacertus fibrosus was identified as a thickened, shiny white structure and released. The Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH) score, grip strength, and pinch strength were tested before and after surgery. At 6 months after surgery, the QuickDASH score was again assessed with a WALANT satisfactory questionnaire.
RESULTS: A total of 93 patients were included in the study. The mean age of the patients was 38.7 years, and most were women (77.4%). The mean operating time was 70 minutes. The mean preoperative QuickDASH score was 53, which significantly reduced immediately after surgery to 7.8 (P < .001) and remained low at 6 months after surgery (10.6). The mean grip strength showed a significant increase from a preoperative mean of 16 kg to a postoperative mean of 24 kg (P < .001). Pinch strength also significantly increased from a preoperative mean of 9 kg to 13 kg after surgery (P < .001).
CONCLUSIONS: Lacertus syndrome remains an underdiagnosed disease that can be treated efficiently with a directed minimal surgical incision under wide-awake local anesthesia. Lacertus release appears to significantly reduce pain and numbness with markedly improved hand grip and pinch strength. The corresponding QuickDASH scores also improved significantly after surgery. This study is vital to our understanding of proximal median nerve entrapment and to accurately diagnose it.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic III.