16
Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Local Anesthetic Toxicity

Chuck Magich, MS, CRNAStaff Nurse Anesthetist

R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma CenterBaltimore, MDOctober 2013

Page 2: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Used in epidural catheters & peripheral nerve block catheters.

“caine” family: Lidocaine Bupivicaine

Page 3: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Physiology

Local anesthetics block Na+ channels to prevent impulse transmission.

Meant for perineuronal injection, not IV!

Can bind to other receptors, especially cardiac.

Page 4: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

More about Locals• Bolus at insertion 20-40 cc’s

• Infusion rates 5-10cc’s /hr

• Epi used in local to detect intravascular injection (HTN, tachy)

• Epi also used to prolong duration of action by causing vasoconstriction to area infiltrated

• Always aspirate before injecting

• Small incremental injections

Page 5: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Signs & symptoms of toxicity

CNS Dizziness Circumoral numbness Tinnitus Metallic taste Confusion Seizure Coma

Cardiovacular Hypotension Bradycardia Heart Block Vent Arrythmias V-tach V-Fib Asystole

Page 6: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Traditional Management of Toxicity

BLS ACLS

CPB Often prolonged

resus w/poor outcomes

Page 7: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

First discovered in 1998 by Weinberg First used to successfully treat patient in

2006 (Rosenblatt) Now being shown to be effective for other

types of OD’s: TCA’s, beta blockers, calcium channel blockers

History of Lipid Rescue

Page 8: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Rat Experiment

http://youtu.be/b70Li9r3pL8

http://youtu.be/B3au3aKU4oE

Page 9: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Lipid Rescue Protocol

Page 10: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

105 cc’s IV push

1050 cc/hr

Calculations

70 Kg patient:1. Bolus dose?2. Infusion rate

(cc/hr)?

Notify pharmacy ASAP!

“Rule of 15:” Bolus = 1.5

0.25ml/kg/min = 15 X wt(kg) = cc/hr

Page 11: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

How it works

“Partitioning”:• Lipid Sink• Lipid Pool• Lipid

Sponge

Page 12: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Location

Available at all satellite pharmacy windows:• GOR• 3rd floor old trauma

building

Hospital-wide date TBA

Currently in large omnicell just outside New TOR entrance

Once hospital wide, only in key omnicells, not every one.

Page 13: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

What & Where?

Contents:1. 20% Intralipid

(500ml)2. Alaris pump tubing3. Copy of protocol

Page 14: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

• 84 y/o, ASA 2, 70 kg• Femoral neck fx• Block w/ 30cc 0.25%

Bupivicaine• Neg asp after every 5 cc• c/o feeling “funny” 1 min

after block• Became unresponsive

followed by seizure• Developed PEA arrest• Intubated & CPR started• 1mg epi given• 20% intralipid started

within 5-8 mins after LOC• Rec’d 500 ml lipid total

• Soon after lipid started developed SB 35

• Atropine 0.5mg x 2• Ext pacing started• HR 70 w/stable BP• To ICU on no pressors• 24* later hemiarthroplasty

performed• Extubated end of case• DC to floor 3 days later• Completely neurologically

intact

Case Study

Page 15: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Websites:

1. http://lipidrescue.org2. http://www.lipidrescue.c

om

Need to Know More???

LIPID RESCUE APP

Page 16: Local Anesthetic Toxicity Chuck Magich, MS, CRNA Staff Nurse Anesthetist R Adams Cowley, Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

1. http://lipidrescue.org2. http://www.lipidrescue.com3. Weinberg, GL (2012). Lipid Emulsion Infusion:

Resuscitation for Local Anesthetic and Other Drug Overdose. Anesthesiology 2012; 117 (1), pp. 180-187.

4. Hiller, DB; Gregorio, GD; Ripper, R; Kelly, K; Massad, M; Edelman, L; Edelman, G; Feinstein, DL; Weinberg, GL. Epinephrine Impairs Lipid Resuscitation from Bupivacaine Overdose: A Threshold Effect. Anesthesiology 2009: 111 (3), pp.498-505.

References