Surgical approach
- Not an operation; a regional anaesthetic technique for forearm/hand surgery (e.g. tendon repair, ORIF wrist/hand, carpal tunnel release, Dupuytren’s, hand trauma washout).
- Typical surgical steps (examples):
- Tourniquet applied to upper arm (often required) → exsanguination → incision/repair/fixation → dressing/splint.
- Position: supine, arm abducted on arm board; surgeon works distal to elbow.
Anaesthetic management
- Type of anaesthesia: Regional (axillary block) ± sedation; can convert to GA if inadequate/urgent.
- Airway: usually none (spontaneous ventilation) or nasal cannulae/face mask; if deep sedation/GA → SGA/ETT as indicated.
- Duration: block performance 10–20 min; onset 10–30 min depending on LA; surgical duration commonly 0.5–2 hours (varies widely).
- How painful: surgery itself can be well covered; tourniquet pain may limit tolerance (often begins 30–60 min).
- Analgesia plan: multimodal (paracetamol/NSAID if appropriate) + opioid rescue; consider adjuvants/long-acting LA for prolonged analgesia.
- Monitoring/standards: full AAGBI monitoring; IV access; resus drugs incl. Intralipid immediately available.
Indications and coverage
- Indications: surgery/analgesia for elbow to hand, especially forearm, wrist, hand procedures.
- Dermatomal/nerve coverage: terminal branches of brachial plexus at axilla: median, ulnar, radial, musculocutaneous.
- Important: intercostobrachial nerve (T2) supplies medial upper arm/tourniquet area → not blocked by axillary block; may need separate subcutaneous ring infiltration or specific block.
- Less reliable for: proximal arm/shoulder surgery (need supraclavicular/interscalene).
Relevant anatomy (exam-focused)
- Axillary artery is the key landmark; nerves are arranged around it (variable):
- Median: often anterolateral/anterior to artery.
- Ulnar: often medial to artery.
- Radial: often posterior/posterolateral to artery.
- Musculocutaneous: typically leaves sheath early; lies in/near coracobrachialis between biceps and coracobrachialis (often not adjacent to artery).
- Axillary sheath: fascial extension of prevertebral fascia; contains artery and many nerves, but septations and early exit of musculocutaneous contribute to patchy block.
- Structures at risk: axillary artery/vein, lymphatics; median nerve injury risk with intraneural injection; pleura is remote (lower pneumothorax risk than supraclavicular).
Contraindications
- Absolute: patient refusal; LA allergy (true IgE rare); infection at site; inability to cooperate/consent; uncontrolled bleeding diathesis (relative/absolute depending on severity).
- Relative: anticoagulation (follow RA-UK/ASRA principles; axillary is compressible but still caution); pre-existing neuropathy; severe PVD/AV fistula limb; inability to abduct arm; sepsis; significant respiratory compromise is usually less relevant than for proximal blocks.
Technique (ultrasound-guided preferred)
- Position: supine; arm abducted 90°, elbow flexed; forearm supinated; comfortable head/neck position.
- Probe: high-frequency linear; scan transverse in axilla to identify axillary artery (pulsatile) and surrounding nerves; use colour Doppler to identify veins.
- Needle approach: in-plane (commonly) from anterior/superior aspect; aim for perineural spread around each nerve (or around artery with targeted deposits).
- Musculocutaneous nerve: identify in coracobrachialis; inject separately (common cause of sparing if missed).
- Volume strategy (typical adult): total 20–40 mL depending on LA/concentration and number of injections; ultrasound allows lower volumes but ensure adequate spread.
- Safety steps: incremental aspiration; frequent verbal contact; avoid high injection pressure; stop if pain/paraesthesia or resistance; document neuro status pre/post.
Alternative techniques
- Nerve stimulator technique: seek motor responses (e.g. median: wrist/finger flexion; ulnar: 4th/5th finger flexion; radial: wrist/finger extension; musculocutaneous: elbow flexion).
- Transarterial technique (historical): through axillary artery with injection posterior/anterior; higher vascular puncture/haematoma risk; largely replaced by ultrasound.
- Perivascular single-injection techniques can be less reliable due to septations and musculocutaneous exit; multiple targeted injections improve success.
Local anaesthetic choices (typical examples; adjust to patient and dose limits)
- Shorter procedures: lidocaine 1–2% (± adrenaline) for faster onset; consider alkalinisation (e.g. bicarbonate) per local practice.
- Longer analgesia: ropivacaine 0.5% or levobupivacaine 0.25–0.5%.
- Dose safety: calculate maximum safe dose (consider lean body weight, comorbidities, pregnancy, age); remember cumulative dose if also infiltrating tourniquet area.
- Adjuvants: adrenaline reduces systemic absorption and helps detect intravascular injection; perineural dexamethasone may prolong duration (off-label; local policy). Avoid mixing without clear rationale.
Assessment of block
- Sensory testing (cold/light touch/pinprick) in nerve territories:
- Median: palmar index finger.
- Ulnar: palmar little finger.
- Radial: dorsal first web space.
- Musculocutaneous: lateral forearm (lateral cutaneous nerve of forearm).
- Motor testing (optional): thumb opposition (median), finger abduction (ulnar), wrist extension (radial), elbow flexion (musculocutaneous).
- Tourniquet: test medial upper arm sensation; consider intercostobrachial infiltration if needed.
Complications and management
- Local anaesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST): tinnitus, metallic taste, agitation → seizures → cardiovascular collapse.
- Immediate actions: stop injection, call for help, airway/oxygen/ventilate, treat seizures (benzodiazepine), manage arrhythmias (avoid large doses propofol in instability), start lipid emulsion early per guideline, CPR if needed.
- Vascular puncture/haematoma: commoner than proximal blocks; apply firm pressure; caution anticoagulated patients.
- Nerve injury: intraneural injection, high pressure, needle trauma, neurotoxicity, ischaemia; document, reassure, follow local nerve injury pathway; urgent review if severe pain, progressive deficit, or compartment syndrome suspected.
- Infection: rare; asepsis essential.
- Block failure/patchy block: common causes include missed musculocutaneous nerve, inadequate spread, septations, insufficient onset time; manage with supplementation or convert to GA.
- Pneumothorax: very rare with axillary approach (more relevant to supraclavicular).
Sedation and perioperative considerations
- Sedation: minimal/moderate preferred; maintain verbal contact during injection; avoid deep sedation that masks intraneural pain or early LAST symptoms.
- Tourniquet pain management: reassurance, light sedation/analgesia, consider additional blocks/infiltration; if severe and prolonged, may need GA.
- Post-op: sling advice (protect insensate limb), written instructions, warn about burns/trauma, time course of block resolution, safety-net for persistent numbness/weakness.
Describe the anatomy relevant to an axillary brachial plexus block.
Focus on terminal branches, their relationship to the axillary artery, and why the block can be patchy.
- Brachial plexus cords divide into terminal branches in/near the axilla: median, ulnar, radial, musculocutaneous.
- Axillary artery is central; nerve positions are variable but classically: median anterior, ulnar medial, radial posterior; musculocutaneous often within coracobrachialis.
- Axillary sheath may be septated; musculocutaneous exits early → single perivascular injection may miss nerves → patchy block.
- Intercostobrachial nerve (T2) supplies medial upper arm/tourniquet area and is not part of brachial plexus → requires separate coverage.
What are the indications and contraindications for an axillary block?
Give a structured answer: indications, absolute contraindications, relative contraindications.
- Indications: surgery/analgesia for forearm, wrist, hand; useful when avoiding GA or for day-case analgesia.
- Absolute contraindications: refusal, infection at site, true LA allergy, inability to cooperate/consent.
- Relative contraindications: anticoagulation/bleeding risk, pre-existing neuropathy, inability to abduct arm, significant local trauma/distortion, sepsis.
How would you perform an ultrasound-guided axillary block?
Examiners want: positioning, scanning, identification of nerves, needle approach, LA deposition, safety.
- Position patient supine; arm abducted 90°, elbow flexed; apply full monitoring and IV access; asepsis; resus drugs and lipid available.
- Use linear high-frequency probe in axilla; identify axillary artery and veins (Doppler).
- Identify nerves around artery; locate musculocutaneous in/near coracobrachialis.
- In-plane needle; inject incrementally with aspiration; aim for perineural spread around median/ulnar/radial and separate injection for musculocutaneous; total volume commonly 20–40 mL depending on LA and patient factors.
- Stop if severe pain/paraesthesia or high resistance; reassess needle tip; avoid intraneural injection.
Why might an axillary block fail, and how would you manage a patchy block intraoperatively?
Include technical, anatomical, and time-related causes; then a pragmatic rescue plan.
- Causes: missed musculocutaneous nerve; inadequate LA spread due to septations; insufficient volume; intravascular injection; not allowing enough onset time; anatomical variation.
- Management: re-assess sensory distribution; top-up targeted nerves under ultrasound; infiltrate surgical field as appropriate; address tourniquet pain (intercostobrachial infiltration, analgesia/sedation).
- If still inadequate or urgent surgery: convert to GA (with appropriate fasting/airway plan) and document.
How would you assess whether the block is working before allowing surgery to start?
Give specific sensory points and relate them to nerves; mention tourniquet area.
- Test sensory loss to cold/light touch/pinprick in: median (palmar index), ulnar (palmar little), radial (dorsal first web space), musculocutaneous (lateral forearm).
- Optional motor: thumb opposition (median), finger abduction (ulnar), wrist extension (radial), elbow flexion (musculocutaneous).
- Check medial upper arm sensation for tourniquet tolerance; consider intercostobrachial coverage if needed.
Discuss tourniquet pain in the context of axillary block and how you would manage it.
Tourniquet pain is a common viva theme in upper limb regional anaesthesia.
- Mechanism: not fully abolished by peripheral nerve block; contributions from unblocked cutaneous nerves (e.g. intercostobrachial T2) and deep ischaemic pain pathways.
- Prevention: ensure intercostobrachial nerve covered (subcutaneous ring infiltration medial upper arm); minimise tourniquet time/pressure where possible; choose LA with adequate duration.
- Treatment: reassurance, analgesia (opioid), light sedation (e.g. propofol/remifentanil per local practice), consider additional local infiltration; convert to GA if severe/prolonged.
What complications can occur with axillary block, and how would you recognise and manage LAST?
Expect a structured list plus a clear LAST algorithm.
- Complications: vascular puncture/haematoma, infection, nerve injury, block failure, LAST; pneumothorax is rare with axillary approach.
- Recognise LAST: perioral numbness, tinnitus, metallic taste, agitation/confusion → seizures → arrhythmias/hypotension/cardiac arrest.
- Manage: stop injection; call for help; airway/100% O2/ventilate; treat seizures (benzodiazepine); start lipid emulsion early; follow local/RA-UK guidance; CPR if required.
Compare axillary block with supraclavicular and interscalene blocks for upper limb surgery.
A common FRCA-style comparison: coverage, risks, and suitability.
- Axillary: best for forearm/hand; lower risk of pneumothorax/phrenic palsy; may miss musculocutaneous and intercostobrachial; tourniquet pain common.
- Supraclavicular: dense block for arm distal to shoulder; faster onset; higher pneumothorax risk than axillary; possible phrenic nerve involvement (less than interscalene).
- Interscalene: best for shoulder/proximal humerus; high incidence of phrenic nerve palsy and hoarseness; less reliable ulnar distribution; not ideal for severe respiratory disease.
A patient on anticoagulants requires wrist surgery. Would you perform an axillary block?
Answer should be principle-based: compressibility, bleeding risk, guideline adherence, and shared decision-making.
- Assess anticoagulant type, dose, timing, renal function, and indication; check platelet count/coagulation if relevant; follow current regional anaesthesia anticoagulation guidance.
- Axillary site is relatively compressible compared with deep plexus blocks, but bleeding/haematoma can still occur; use ultrasound to avoid vessels; apply prolonged pressure if puncture occurs.
- Discuss risks/benefits and alternatives (GA, local infiltration); document shared decision and post-block neurovascular observations.
Describe the nerve supply of the hand relevant to axillary block and how you would troubleshoot a specific nerve sparing.
Examiners like targeted troubleshooting: identify which nerve is spared and how to rescue it.
- Median: palmar lateral 3½ digits; thenar motor; sparing → pain in index/middle/thumb; rescue with targeted median perineural injection under ultrasound.
- Ulnar: palmar/dorsal medial 1½ digits; intrinsic hand muscles; sparing → little finger pain/weak finger abduction; rescue with targeted ulnar injection medial to artery.
- Radial: dorsal radial hand sensation; wrist/finger extension motor; sparing → dorsal web space pain; rescue with targeted radial injection posterior to artery.
- Musculocutaneous: lateral forearm sensation; elbow flexion; sparing → lateral forearm pain with incision/traction; rescue by injecting in/near coracobrachialis.
You are asked to provide anaesthesia for a hand trauma washout in a patient with COPD. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of an axillary block and how you would conduct the case.
Structure: suitability, benefits/risks, conduct, failure plan, post-op.
- Suitability: procedure distal to elbow; COPD makes avoidance of GA desirable; axillary block avoids phrenic palsy risk seen with interscalene and has very low pneumothorax risk compared with supraclavicular.
- Benefits: spontaneous ventilation; excellent analgesia; reduced opioids; day-case potential; haemodynamic stability.
- Disadvantages/risks: block failure/patchiness; tourniquet pain; LAST; vascular puncture; nerve injury; time to perform/onset.
- Conduct: consent (incl. nerve injury, failure, LAST); monitoring/IV access; ultrasound-guided multi-injection technique including musculocutaneous; calculate LA dose; minimal sedation; confirm block before incision; cover intercostobrachial if tourniquet planned.
- Failure plan: targeted top-ups; surgeon infiltration; convert to GA with COPD-appropriate strategy (lung-protective ventilation, avoid excessive opioids, consider SGA if appropriate).
- Post-op: multimodal analgesia; limb protection advice; neuro checks; safety-net for persistent symptoms.
Outline the complications of brachial plexus blocks and how you would minimise the risk when performing an axillary block.
Examiners expect general complications plus axillary-specific emphasis (vascular puncture, missed nerves, tourniquet).
- Complications: LAST; nerve injury; vascular puncture/haematoma; infection; block failure; allergic reaction; local tissue injury; (pneumothorax/phrenic palsy mainly proximal approaches).
- Risk reduction: ultrasound guidance; identify vessels with Doppler; incremental injection with aspiration; avoid high pressure; minimal sedation; adhere to max LA dose; lipid available; asepsis; document baseline neuro status.
- Axillary-specific: ensure musculocutaneous block; consider intercostobrachial coverage for tourniquet; apply pressure after any vascular puncture.
A patient develops a seizure shortly after injection during an axillary block. Describe your immediate management.
This is essentially a LAST emergency viva; prioritise ABC and lipid therapy.
- Stop LA injection; call for help; commence ABC approach with 100% oxygen; maintain airway and support ventilation to avoid hypoxia/hypercarbia/acidosis.
- Terminate seizure: benzodiazepine (e.g. midazolam); consider small propofol doses only if haemodynamically stable; avoid large doses in instability.
- Start lipid emulsion promptly per guideline; continue supportive care and treat arrhythmias/hypotension; prepare for CPR if deterioration.
- Post-event: ICU/HDU observation; document; report; counsel patient; review LA dosing and technique.
0 comments
Please log in to leave a comment.