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Erschienen in: Journal of Anesthesia 2/2015

01.04.2015 | Short Communication

A retrospective comparative provider workload analysis for femoral nerve and adductor canal catheters following knee arthroplasty

verfasst von: Michael Rasmussen, Eugenia Kim, T. Edward Kim, Steven K. Howard, Seshadri Mudumbai, Nicholas J. Giori, Steven Woolson, Toni Ganaway, Edward R. Mariano

Erschienen in: Journal of Anesthesia | Ausgabe 2/2015

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Abstract

Adductor canal catheters preserve quadriceps strength better than femoral nerve catheters and may facilitate postoperative ambulation following total knee arthroplasty. However, the effect of this newer technique on provider workload, if any, is unknown. We conducted a retrospective provider workload analysis comparing these two catheter techniques; all other aspects of the clinical pathway remained the same. The primary outcome was number of interventions recorded per patient postoperatively. Secondary outcomes included infusion duration, ambulation distance, opioid consumption, and hospital length of stay. Adductor canal patients required a median (10–90th percentiles) of 0.0 (0.0–2.6) interventions compared to 1.0 (0.3–3.0) interventions for femoral patients (p < 0.001); 18/23 adductor canal patients (78 %) compared to 2/22 femoral patients (9 %) required no interventions (p < 0.001). Adductor canal catheter infusions lasted 2.0 (1.4–2.0) days compared to 1.5 (1.0–2.7) days in the femoral group (p = 0.016). Adductor canal patients ambulated further [mean (SD)] than femoral patients on postoperative day 1 [24.5 (21.7) vs. 11.9 (14.6) meters, respectively; p = 0.030] and day 2 [44.9 (26.3) vs. 22.0 (22.2) meters, respectively; p = 0.003]. Postoperative opioid consumption and length of stay were similar between groups. We conclude that adductor canal catheters offer both patient and provider benefits when compared to femoral nerve catheters.
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Metadaten
Titel
A retrospective comparative provider workload analysis for femoral nerve and adductor canal catheters following knee arthroplasty
verfasst von
Michael Rasmussen
Eugenia Kim
T. Edward Kim
Steven K. Howard
Seshadri Mudumbai
Nicholas J. Giori
Steven Woolson
Toni Ganaway
Edward R. Mariano
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2015
Verlag
Springer Japan
Erschienen in
Journal of Anesthesia / Ausgabe 2/2015
Print ISSN: 0913-8668
Elektronische ISSN: 1438-8359
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00540-014-1910-y

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