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Article
Title Future considerations for pharmacologic adjuvants in single-injection peripheral nerve blocks for patients with diabetes mellitus 
Author Williams Brian A, Murinson Beth B, Grable Benjamin R, Orebaugh Steven L  
Article Information Abstract
Publication Regional anesthesia and pain medicine  As the epidemics of obesity and diabetes expand, there are more
patients with these disorders requiring elective surgery. For surgery on
the extremities, peripheral nerve blocks have become a highly
favorable anesthetic option when compared with general anesthesia.
Peripheral blocks reduce respiratory and cardiac stresses, while
potentially mitigating untreated peripheral pain that can foster
physiologic conditions that increase risks for general health
complications. However, local anesthetics are generally accepted to be
a rare but possible cause of nerve damage, and there are no
evidence-based recommendations for dosing local anesthetic nerve
blocks in patients with diabetes. This is important because
anesthesiologists do not want to potentially accelerate peripheral
nerve dysfunction in diabetic patients at risk. This translational
vignette (i) examines laboratory models of diabetes, (ii) summarizes the
pharmacology of perineural adjuvants (epinephrine, clonidine,
buprenorphine, midazolam, tramadol, and dexamethasone), and (iii)
identifies areas that warrant further research to determine viability of
monotherapy or combination therapy for peripheral nerve analgesia in
diabetic patients. Conceivably, future translational research
regarding peripheral nerve blocks in diabetic patients may logically
include study of nontoxic injectable analgesic adjuvants, in
combination, to provide desired analgesia, while possibly avoiding
peripheral nerve toxicity that diabetic animal models have exhibited when
exposed to traditional local anesthetics.


Reference BUPP10049 
Year 2009 
Logged 02/02/2010 
Volume 34 
Part
Pages 445-57 
ISSN 1532-8651 
Keywords  
Comparison Drug  
Language English 

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