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Ipsilateral Shoulder Pain After Thoracotomy with Epidural Analgesia: The Influence of Phrenic Nerve Infiltration with Lidocaine
108
Citations
7
References
2001
Year
Acute PainPain MedicinePhrenic Nerve InfiltrationSurgeryThoracic SpineShoulder PainOrthopaedic SurgeryEpidural AnalgesiaPain ManagementHealth SciencesRegional AnesthesiaPostoperative Pain ManagementPreoperative PainIpsilateral Shoulder PainShoulder SurgeryPain ResearchThoracic SurgeryAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiology
Patients receiving effective thoracic epidural analgesia for postthoracotomy pain may still complain of severe ipsilateral shoulder pain. The etiology of this pain is unclear. In this randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study, we investigated the effect of phrenic nerve infiltration with lidocaine or saline on postoperative shoulder pain in 48 patients. After completion of a lung resection, patients received either 10 mL of 1% lidocaine or 10 mL of 0.9% saline infiltrated into the periphrenic fat pad at the level of the diaphragm. Shoulder pain was experienced by 33% of patients receiving lidocaine, compared with 85% of patients receiving saline (P < 0.008). Overall pain scores were lower with lidocaine (P < 0.05). Paco2 values were not significantly higher with lidocaine in the first 2 h. We conclude that pain transmitted via the phrenic nerve and referred to the shoulder is the most likely explanation for the ipsilateral shoulder pain experienced by patients receiving epidural analgesia for postthoracotomy pain.
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