Lithotomy position and complications

Surgical approach (typical uses of lithotomy)

  • Used to provide access to the perineum, anus, rectum, vagina/cervix, urethra/bladder
    • Common procedures: cystoscopy/TURBT/TURP, ureteroscopy, gynaecology (hysteroscopy, D&C, vaginal surgery), colorectal (haemorrhoids, fistula), obstetrics (operative vaginal delivery, repair).
  • Patient positioned supine with hips flexed/abducted and knees flexed; legs supported in stirrups/boots; table may be Trendelenburg for pelvic exposure.
    • Variants: low lithotomy, standard, high lithotomy; Lloyd-Davies (often with steep Trendelenburg).
  • Surgeon may request: steep head-down, perineal retraction, prolonged duration, intermittent leg movement, lithotomy with laparoscopy/robotics.

Anaesthetic management (overview)

  • Type of anaesthesia: GA (common) or regional (spinal/epidural/CSE) depending on procedure; consider combined techniques for longer cases.
    • Regional advantages: reduced thrombotic risk, good analgesia; disadvantages: hypotension, masking of compartment syndrome/nerve injury pain, limited duration.
  • Airway: ETT often preferred if steep Trendelenburg, pneumoperitoneum, long duration, obesity, aspiration risk; SGA may be acceptable for short, non-Trendelenburg cases with minimal insufflation.
    • Trendelenburg increases airway oedema risk; consider cuff-leak test if prolonged steep head-down.
  • Duration: ranges from <30 min (cystoscopy) to 2–6+ h (complex pelvic/robotic). Risk of positioning injury rises with time (notably >2–4 h).
  • Pain: often mild–moderate for endoscopic; moderate–severe for major pelvic/vaginal/colorectal surgery. Plan multimodal analgesia ± neuraxial/opioid-sparing techniques.
  • Key anaesthetic priorities: haemodynamics, ventilation (esp. Trendelenburg), pressure area/nerve protection, VTE prophylaxis, documentation, and safe coordinated leg movement.

Definition and positioning principles

  • Lithotomy: supine with hips flexed and abducted, knees flexed; legs supported in stirrups/boots; buttocks near table edge for perineal access.
  • Core principles: symmetry, avoid excessive hip flexion/abduction/external rotation, avoid pressure on nerves/soft tissue, maintain access to airway/lines, and secure patient (esp. Trendelenburg).
    • Move both legs together (raise and lower simultaneously) to reduce hip/lumbar torsion and haemodynamic swings.
  • Support type matters: boot stirrups distribute pressure and reduce peroneal nerve injury vs candy-cane supports (higher focal pressure at fibular head).

Physiological effects (FRCA core)

  • Cardiovascular: raising legs increases venous return and may increase preload/CO; returning legs to supine can cause relative hypovolaemia and hypotension (especially if vasodilated/neuraxial).
    • Steep Trendelenburg: ↑ venous return/central venous pressure; may worsen cardiac failure and increase bleeding in head/neck.
  • Respiratory: Trendelenburg + abdominal insufflation (lap/robotic) → ↓ FRC, ↓ compliance, ↑ airway pressures, V/Q mismatch; risk of atelectasis and hypercapnia.
    • Airway oedema risk increases with prolonged steep Trendelenburg and fluid loading.
  • Neurological/ocular: Trendelenburg can increase ICP and IOP; rare risk of postoperative visual loss (more typical in prone but consider in prolonged steep head-down).
  • Peripheral perfusion: elevation and external compression can reduce limb perfusion; prolonged high lithotomy increases risk of lower limb compartment syndrome.

Complications: overview (what to list in a viva)

  • Nerve injuries: commonest positioning complication. Key nerves: common peroneal, femoral, sciatic, obturator, lateral femoral cutaneous, saphenous.
  • Musculoskeletal: hip dislocation, back pain, muscle/ligament strain; rhabdomyolysis (rare).
  • Vascular: DVT/PE; limb ischaemia; pressure-related vascular compromise; haemodynamic instability on leg movement.
  • Compartment syndrome: well-leg compartment syndrome (WLCS) after prolonged lithotomy ± Trendelenburg.
  • Skin/pressure injuries: sacrum, heels, calves, popliteal fossa; perineal pressure injury; genital oedema; eye/face oedema in Trendelenburg.
  • Airway/respiratory: difficult ventilation in steep Trendelenburg; airway oedema; aspiration risk; endotracheal tube migration (cephalad carina shift).

Nerve injuries in lithotomy (high-yield details)

  • Common peroneal nerve (most common): compression at fibular head against stirrup/candy-cane; presents with foot drop (dorsiflexion weakness) ± sensory loss over dorsum of foot/lateral shin.
    • Prevention: avoid pressure at fibular head, use boot supports, pad well, avoid excessive knee flexion/external rotation, check symmetry.
  • Femoral nerve: stretch/compression from excessive hip flexion/abduction/external rotation or retractor pressure; weakness of knee extension (quadriceps), reduced patellar reflex, sensory loss anterior thigh/medial leg.
    • Prevention: limit hip flexion/abduction, avoid extreme lithotomy, ensure retractors not compressing psoas/femoral nerve region.
  • Sciatic nerve: stretch with extreme hip flexion and knee extension; presents with weakness below knee (variable) and sensory changes posterior leg/foot.
    • Prevention: avoid combined hip flexion with knee extension; keep knees flexed; avoid extreme positions.
  • Obturator nerve: excessive hip abduction or pelvic surgery; weakness of thigh adduction; medial thigh sensory loss (variable).
  • Lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (meralgia paraesthetica): compression near ASIS/inguinal ligament from straps/positioning; sensory symptoms lateral thigh.
  • Risk factors for nerve injury: prolonged duration, extremes of BMI (thin: less padding; obese: increased pressure), diabetes/peripheral neuropathy, smoking, hypotension, hypothermia, inadequate padding, steep Trendelenburg/robotics.

Well-leg compartment syndrome (WLCS) in lithotomy

  • Definition: acute compartment syndrome in a limb without direct trauma, classically after prolonged lithotomy (often with Trendelenburg). Surgical emergency.
  • Pathophysiology: reduced arterial inflow (leg elevation, hypotension) + impaired venous return (external compression) → ischaemia-reperfusion, capillary leak, rising compartment pressures.
  • Risk factors: duration >4 hours (risk rises with time), high lithotomy, steep Trendelenburg, hypotension/vasoconstrictors, hypovolaemia, tight calf supports, obesity, peripheral vascular disease, long pelvic/robotic surgery.
  • Clinical features (often post-op): severe leg pain (out of proportion), pain on passive stretch, tense swollen compartments, paraesthesia, weakness; pulses may be present (late sign).
  • Diagnosis: clinical; compartment pressure measurement if uncertain. Do not delay treatment for tests if high suspicion.
  • Management: urgent senior review and immediate fasciotomy; remove constriction, level limb (avoid elevation), optimise perfusion (oxygen, correct hypotension), treat rhabdomyolysis (fluids, monitor K+/CK, renal protection).
  • Prevention: minimise time in lithotomy, periodic leg lowering (if feasible), avoid excessive elevation, use boot supports, avoid tight straps, maintain normotension/normovolaemia, active temperature management, document checks.

Airway and ventilation issues in Trendelenburg lithotomy (lap/robotic)

  • Effects: cephalad diaphragm displacement → ↑ peak/plateau pressures, ↓ compliance; CO2 absorption → hypercapnia; facial/airway oedema; increased aspiration risk.
  • Practical management: secure ETT well; consider pressure-controlled ventilation, PEEP, recruitment manoeuvres; monitor ETCO2 and adjust minute ventilation; limit fluids where appropriate; consider diuresis only if clinically indicated.
  • Extubation considerations: assess for airway oedema (cuff leak, direct laryngoscopy if needed), head-up before extubation, ensure full reversal and readiness for reintubation.

Safe positioning checklist (what you say and do)

  • Before induction (if possible): explain positioning risks; assess baseline neuropathy; consider documentation of pre-existing deficits.
  • During positioning: move legs simultaneously; ensure hips not excessively flexed/abducted; knees flexed; neutral ankle; avoid pressure at fibular head and popliteal fossa; pad sacrum/heels; check genital/perineal pressure points.
  • Lines/monitoring: ensure IV/arterial lines not kinked; check BP cuff/arterial trace after Trendelenburg; ensure access to airway and eyes protected (tape + lubrication).
  • Intra-op: regular documented checks (e.g., every 30–60 min): limb position, padding, perfusion, pressure areas; consider lowering legs intermittently in long cases if feasible.
  • End of case: return to supine gradually; anticipate hypotension; reassess limb position and skin; document any concerns; structured handover (position duration, Trendelenburg time, any issues).

Postoperative assessment and management of suspected positioning injury

  • Early recognition: ask about numbness/weakness/pain in legs; examine motor and sensory function; inspect pressure areas.
  • If nerve palsy suspected: remove ongoing compression, document findings, inform surgical team, consider neurology/physio referral; most are neuropraxia and recover over weeks–months, but exclude compressive haematoma or compartment syndrome.
  • If WLCS suspected: treat as emergency—urgent surgical review for fasciotomy; analgesia should not delay diagnosis; monitor CK, renal function, electrolytes; manage rhabdomyolysis/hyperkalaemia.
You are asked to anaesthetise a patient for a 4-hour robotic pelvic procedure in steep Trendelenburg and lithotomy. What are your main concerns and how will you manage them?

Structure: airway/ventilation, haemodynamics, positioning injury prevention, VTE/pressure areas, emergence/extubation.

  • Airway: choose ETT; secure well; consider bite block; protect eyes; anticipate airway oedema; plan extubation strategy.
  • Ventilation: expect ↓ compliance/↑ pressures; use PEEP, recruitment, adjust ventilation for CO2 load; monitor ETCO2 and plateau pressures.
  • Haemodynamics: Trendelenburg + pneumoperitoneum affects preload/afterload; maintain normovolaemia; avoid prolonged hypotension (WLCS risk).
  • Positioning: boot stirrups, pad fibular head, avoid extreme hip flexion/abduction; move legs together; regular documented checks; consider intermittent leg lowering if feasible.
  • Complications: plan for WLCS, nerve palsies, pressure injuries; DVT prophylaxis; temperature management.
  • Emergence: return head-up; assess for airway oedema (cuff leak); extubate only when safe; consider HDU if concerns.
Describe the physiological cardiovascular changes when moving a patient into and out of lithotomy.
  • Into lithotomy: leg elevation autotransfuses venous blood → ↑ venous return/preload; may increase CO and BP (variable with anaesthesia depth).
  • Out of lithotomy: venous pooling in legs → ↓ preload → hypotension, especially with neuraxial block/vasodilation/hypovolaemia.
  • Practical: move legs together; return gradually; be ready with vasopressors/fluids; reassess BP after position change.
Which nerves are most at risk in lithotomy and what mechanisms cause injury?
  • Common peroneal: compression at fibular head from stirrups/straps.
  • Femoral: stretch/compression from excessive hip flexion/abduction/external rotation; retractor pressure.
  • Sciatic: stretch with extreme hip flexion with knee extension; malpositioning.
  • Obturator: excessive abduction or pelvic surgical factors.
  • Lateral femoral cutaneous: compression near inguinal ligament/ASIS from straps.
A patient complains of foot drop after a prolonged lithotomy case. How do you assess and manage this?
  • Assess: focused neuro exam (dorsiflexion/eversion strength; sensory dorsum of foot/lateral shin), check for pain/swelling suggesting WLCS, review positioning notes and duration.
  • Immediate actions: remove any ongoing compression; ensure limb perfusion; document findings; inform surgeon and duty consultant.
  • Exclude emergencies: if severe pain/tense compartments → urgent compartment syndrome pathway; if anticoagulated/neuraxial concerns consider haematoma depending on context.
  • Ongoing: analgesia, physio, safety-netting; consider neurology referral and nerve conduction studies if persistent (often arranged after several weeks).
Define well-leg compartment syndrome and outline diagnosis and management.
  • Definition: compartment syndrome in a non-traumatised limb, classically after prolonged lithotomy ± Trendelenburg.
  • Diagnosis: clinical—pain out of proportion, pain on passive stretch, tense compartments, neuro deficits; pulses may remain; compartment pressures if uncertain.
  • Management: urgent surgical review and fasciotomy; optimise oxygenation and perfusion; remove constriction; treat rhabdomyolysis and monitor renal function/electrolytes.
How would you prevent nerve injury in lithotomy? Give a practical checklist.
  • Use boot stirrups where possible; pad fibular head and pressure points; avoid popliteal fossa compression.
  • Avoid extremes: limit hip flexion/abduction/external rotation; keep knees flexed; ankles neutral.
  • Move legs together; ensure symmetry; secure patient for Trendelenburg; regular documented checks during long cases.
  • Maintain normotension, normovolaemia, normothermia; consider intermittent leg lowering if feasible in prolonged cases.
What are the airway risks of steep Trendelenburg lithotomy and how do you mitigate them?
  • Risks: airway oedema, reduced FRC/compliance, aspiration risk, ETT migration, difficult reintubation if extubation fails.
  • Mitigation: prefer ETT; secure tube; eye protection; ventilatory strategy with PEEP; cautious fluids; head-up before extubation; cuff leak assessment; plan for delayed extubation if concern.
A patient becomes hypotensive when the legs are lowered at the end of a long lithotomy case. Why, and what do you do?
  • Why: loss of autotransfusion and venous pooling → reduced preload; compounded by vasodilation (anaesthetics/neuraxial), hypovolaemia, bleeding.
  • Do: lower legs gradually and together; check surgical field for bleeding; treat with vasopressors and fluids as appropriate; reassess depth of anaesthesia and ventilation; repeat BP after position change.
List complications of lithotomy position under headings: neurological, vascular, musculoskeletal, skin/pressure, respiratory/airway.
  • Neurological: peroneal/femoral/sciatic/obturator/lateral femoral cutaneous nerve injuries; neuropraxia; WLCS-associated neuropathy.
  • Vascular: DVT/PE; limb ischaemia; WLCS; haemodynamic instability on leg movement.
  • Musculoskeletal: hip dislocation, back strain, muscle injury/rhabdomyolysis (rare).
  • Skin/pressure: sacral/heel/calf pressure sores; perineal injury; genital oedema; facial/ocular oedema in Trendelenburg.
  • Respiratory/airway: reduced compliance/FRC, hypercapnia, aspiration risk, airway oedema, ETT migration.
How does neuraxial anaesthesia change your risk assessment for lithotomy complications?
  • Pros: analgesia, reduced stress response, possible reduction in thrombotic risk.
  • Cons: hypotension (may worsen limb perfusion/WLCS risk), sensory block may mask early pain of compartment syndrome/nerve compression; limited duration may necessitate conversion to GA.
  • Practical: maintain perfusion pressure, vigilance for swelling/tense compartments, careful postoperative assessment and safety-netting.
Viva: ‘Discuss the complications of the lithotomy position and how you would prevent them.’

Expected approach: categorise complications, then give prevention strategy and monitoring/documentation.

  • Complications: nerve injuries (peroneal/femoral/sciatic), WLCS, DVT/PE, pressure sores, musculoskeletal injury, haemodynamic changes, airway/resp issues in Trendelenburg.
  • Prevention: correct supports/padding, avoid extremes, legs moved together, maintain perfusion, regular checks, minimise duration, VTE prophylaxis, eye/airway protection in Trendelenburg.
  • Management: early recognition; treat WLCS as emergency; document and communicate; postoperative neuro exam and follow-up.
Short answer theme: ‘Well leg compartment syndrome—risk factors, diagnosis, and immediate management.’
  • Risk factors: prolonged lithotomy (>4 h), steep Trendelenburg, hypotension/hypovolaemia, tight calf supports, obesity/PVD, long pelvic/robotic surgery.
  • Diagnosis: severe pain out of proportion, pain on passive stretch, tense compartments; pulses may be present; measure pressures if uncertain.
  • Immediate management: urgent surgical review and fasciotomy; optimise perfusion; treat rhabdomyolysis; monitor renal function/electrolytes.
Viva theme: ‘How does steep Trendelenburg affect ventilation and airway management?’
  • Ventilation: ↓ compliance/FRC, ↑ airway pressures, ↑ atelectasis; CO2 absorption (if insufflation) → hypercapnia.
  • Airway: oedema risk; aspiration risk; tube migration; extubation planning and cuff-leak assessment.

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