CHAPTER 65 Spinal Anesthesia
2 What are the usual doses of common local anesthetics used in spinal anesthesia and the duration of effect?
5 Describe the factors involved in distribution (and extent) of conduction blockade
Patient characteristics include height, position, intra-abdominal pressure, anatomic configuration of the spinal canal, and pregnancy. There is great interindividual variation in lumbosacral CSF volumes; magnetic resonance imaging has shown volumes ranging from 28 to 81 ml. Lumbar CSF volumes correlate well with the height and regression of the block. With the exception of an inverse relation with weight, no external physical measurement reliably estimates lumbar CSF volumes. CSF volumes are also reduced in pregnancy.
The total injected dose of local anesthetic is important, whereas the volume or concentration of injectant is unimportant.
The baricity of the local anesthetic solution is important. Baricity is defined by the ratio of the density of the local anesthetic solution to the density of CSF. A solution with a ratio >1 is hyperbaric and tends to sink with gravity within the CSF. An isobaric solution has a baricity of 1 and tends to remain in the immediate area of injection. A ratio <1 is a hypobaric solution, which rises in the CSF.