CHAPTER 1 Introduction
Within anesthetic practice, the role of regional anesthesia – including peripheral nerve block – has expanded greatly over the past two decades. In 1998, a national survey demonstrated that 87.8% of US anesthesiologists make use of regional techniques.1 This widespread use arises in part from the widely held belief (to some extent evidence-based) that, at least in some settings, anesthetic techniques that avoid general anesthesia offer real advantages in terms of patient outcome.2 For instance, Chelly and colleagues have demonstrated clearly that continuous femoral infusion of ropivacaine 0.2% in patients undergoing total knee replacement provides better postoperative analgesia than epidural or patient-controlled analgesia. Critically, this technique accelerated early functional recovery and was associated with decreased duration of hospital stay, postoperative blood loss, and incidence of serious postoperative complications.3
A second reason that accounts for the recent increase in peripheral nerve block practiced in developed countries is the greater proportion of surgical procedures carried out as ‘day cases’. Regional anesthesia plays a fundamental role in the future of day case or ambulatory anesthesia, both as an intrinsic component of the anesthetic technique and for effective postoperative analgesia.4 Currently, 60–70% of all surgical procedures performed in the USA are day cases. It is likely that peripheral nerve block, used appropriately in the ambulatory setting, decreases the time to discharge from hospital, improves patient satisfaction and postoperative analgesia, facilitates rehabilitation, and results in fewer complications than conventional analgesic techniques.
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It is widely recognized that anesthetists are incompletely trained unless they are proficient in the performance of peripheral nerve block.5 Anesthetists comprise the single largest group of hospital doctors. Approximately 5% of all physicians in the USA practice anesthesia. In some countries, anesthesia is also practiced by nurse anesthetists.