Femoral Nerve / Fascia Iliaca Block Catheter - A "How-To" Guide to Insertion

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  • Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
  • This video illustrates my preferred approach to femoral nerve / fascia iliaca block catheter insertion for prolonged analgesia in hip fracture, and hip / thigh / knee surgery. A Pajunk E-cath catheter set is used here for its relative simplicity and ease of insertion, but the same approach can be used with any catheter-through needle set.
    This clip is extracted from a longer video ( • Ultrasound-guided Fasc... ) describing fascia iliaca blocks in general and why I personally prefer to think of and practice them as an out-of-plane femoral nerve block.
    Chapters:
    00:00 - Intro
    01:10 - Hybrid OOP-IP approach
    01:30 - Technique

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7

  • @KiJinnChin
    @KiJinnChin  10 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for the kind comment - as always, I am just happy for the opportunity to share what I find useful in my own practice.

  • @DarkoLHS
    @DarkoLHS 10 місяців тому +1

    In contrast with other famous experts in this field your unselfishness is remarkable! Thank you so much !!!!

    • @KiJinnChin
      @KiJinnChin  10 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for the kind comment - as always, I am just happy for the opportunity to share what I find useful in my own practice.

  • @sherifhabashy8726
    @sherifhabashy8726 10 місяців тому

    Excellent way. Thank you.

  • @akshayuttarwar3240
    @akshayuttarwar3240 10 місяців тому

    By turning USG probe in plane, you inject the local in femoral nerve sheath or fascia illiaca plane?
    If it's in femoral nerve sheath will it spread to lateral femoral cutaneous nerve of thigh and obturator? Please specify.
    Thank you sir.
    I just love your videos and practical tips.

    • @KiJinnChin
      @KiJinnChin  10 місяців тому +4

      There is no distinct femoral nerve sheath. The femoral nerve is encased by a splitting of the fascia iliaca. By targeting the lateral aspect of the nerve, you are entering deep to fascia iliaca and opening up the plane. As you can see when you turn probe longitudinal and get a parasagittal view, you can see that the local anesthetic is forming a layer over the iliopsoas muscle and spreading into the pelvis (2:45 in the video). To consistently get the LFCN, the LA has to spread high and lateral enough - this means using volumes of 30-40ml (see pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30798268/), and perhaps also injecting with more pressure on the syringe. But for sure you have a better chance than if you do an infrainguinal IP approach to either fascia iliaca or femoral nerve.

    • @akshayuttarwar3240
      @akshayuttarwar3240 10 місяців тому

      @@KiJinnChin Thanks a lot sir for that detailed reply.